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The Blue Eagle at Work

The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace is a legal treatise written by Charles J. Morris which analyzes collective bargaining under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), the federal statute governing most private sector labor relations in the United States. Published in 2005 by Cornell University Press, the text claims that the NLRA guarantees that employees under that Act have the right to bargain collectively through minority unions—but only on a members-only basis—in workplaces where there is not an established majority union, notwithstanding that the present practice and general understanding of the law is that only majority-union employees are entitled to engage in collective bargaining on an exclusivity basis. Contracts resulting from such minority-union bargaining would apply to union members only, not to other employees.

The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace
AuthorCharles J. Morris
SubjectLabor relations in the United States
Published2005 (Cornell University Press)
ISBN0-8014-4317-2

Structure of the book edit

The Blue Eagle At Work contains three parts: 1) An overview of collective bargaining law in the U.S.; 2) The legal framework in which members-only collective bargaining could occur; and 3) How unions could implement and strengthen members-only collective bargaining and use it as a strategic organizing tool.

Part I edit

Part I of the book addresses collective bargaining law in the United States. It is broken down into four chapters.

Chapter One provides a historical overview of the rise of membership-based collective bargaining in the period prior to federal recognition of the right to bargain collectively, the provisions of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, and the enactment and legal meaning of Section 7(a) of the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA). Attention is paid to The Conference Board survey of labor relations conducted in November 1933.[1] Morris points out that the survey results indicate that members-only recognition and bargaining were common when the NLRA was enacted.

Chapter Two provides an in-depth and exceedingly detailed history of legislative attempts to enact improvements in federal labor law. The chapter provides an extensive analysis of the nine legislative drafts of Senator Robert F. Wagner (D-NY) for his 1934 bill. The chapter also discusses the implementation of the NIRA under first the National Recovery Administration (NRA) and then the National Labor Board and the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Morris documents how the concepts of representational exclusivity and majoritarianism were developed in cases such as Denver Tramway Corporation, 1 NLB 63 (1934)[2] and Houde Engineering Corp., 1 NLRB (old) 35 (1934)[3] and cites cases showing that employers refusing to bargain with a minority union violated the NIRA.[4]

Chapter Three is an extensive consideration of the legislative history of Wagner Act. The three drafts of the Act, committee hearings, floor debates, and committee reports are closely examined to tease out the meanings of the changes made. Morris uncovered one feature that required no teasing, a "smoking gun" that shows that congress clearly intended that collective bargaining would not be confined to majority unions only, to wit, the deliberate rejection of a version of the duty-to-bargain contained in Section 8(a)(5) that would have so confined the bargaining process. Instead, the present wording, which does not so limit the bargaining obligation, was selected.[5] Morris notes that the Senate committee and debate statements disparaging minority or plurality bargaining all referred to bargaining after a majority representative had been chosen. None referred to bargaining before majority selection, which was not a controversial issue.

Chapter Four contains the history of members-only minority-union organizing and bargaining during the decade following passage of the NLRA and what followed. Morris notes:

For several years following the passage of the Wagner Act in 1935, there was never any legal question raised as to the scope of its bargaining requirements, either as to minority-union members-only bargaining or majority-union exclusivity bargaining. Both types of bargaining had prevailed earlier under the Blue Eagle administration of Section 7(a) of the NIRA and both were now widely accepted under the new NLRA.[6]

Morris points to the organizing history of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee and United Auto Workers as prime examples of members-only organizing and collective bargaining, and cites statistics from Bureau of National Affairs (BNA) and Twentieth Century Fund reports which document the widespread use and acceptance of members-only contracts.

Morris concludes that several factors led unions to become dependent on representational elections. The NLRB itself favored representational elections, "for they provided a relatively simple pattern for bargaining-unit determinations, conduct of elections, and certification of majorities for exclusive union representation."[7] The conflict between the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations refocused attention away from organizing. The rapid expansion of unions during World War II and the massive waves of strikes which came after the war continued to divert attention away from organizing. Morris also argues that the Taft-Hartley Act led to "the phenomenon of unions becoming busily engaged in a multitude of legal defensive actions generated by the numerous union restrictions that the new law had created."[8]

"As a consequence," Morris concludes, "only a few years after Taft-Hartley, the NLRB and its union and employer constituents were routinely viewing majority-union bargaining—which was certainly the ultimate goal intended by the Act—as the only bargaining contemplated by the Act. Although unions had originally favored NLRB elections out of sheer convenience, their reliance on the election process had now become routine, with attendant misunderstanding of the true scope of bargaining offered by the statute. ... Thus was born the latter-day conventional wisdom that assumes that majority-union representation is the sine qua non of collective bargaining."[9]

Part II edit

Part II of The Blue Eagle At Work examines the legal interpretation of Sections 1, 7, 8(a)(1), 8(a)(3), 8(a)(5), and 9(a) of the NLRA, and concludes that Morris' construction of the law is consistent with the statutory requirements and also with existing legal rulings and treaty obligations. Part II consists of five chapters.

Chapter Five engages in a Plain-Meaning-Rule construction of the language of Section 7(a) and the NLRA. Morris examines Section 7, Section 8(a)(1), Section 9(a), and Section 8(a)(5) of the NLRB for their plain meaning, and concludes they guarantee the right of all employees to bargain collectively, whether before or after majority-union designation. Bargaining before such selection must be for members-only through a union of the employees' choice; bargaining after majority selection must be for all employees in the bargaining unit through the selected union only. This chapter provides the heart of Morris' thesis, for although it is supported by legislative history (and constitutional and international law), its primary basis is contained in the unambiguous text of the statute. The critical language is short, simple, and of clear meaning. Fourteen words in Section 7, borrowed verbatim from Section 7(a) of the NIRA, provide that "Employees shall have the right...to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing...." This is guaranteed and enforced by Section 8(a)(1) and reinforced by Section 8(a)(5) (which by its clear wording and its "smoking gun" legislative history requires bargaining both before and after majority selection). The only limitation on this bargaining right is a conditional limitation on the choice of representatives, but not on the duty to bargain. This limitation is contained in Section 9(a) which does not operate unless there is a majority representative, in which event the selected majority union becomes the exclusive representative. Morris points out that both the Supreme Court and the NLRB have approved minority and members only bargaining and resulting members-only contracts[10] where they exist voluntarily, and that the time is now ripe for a decision confirming that such bargaining is enforceable where there is not yet a majority representative. This universal concept of collective bargaining conforms to the "policy of the United States" expressed in Section 1 of the Act, which policy was expressly reconfirmed in the Taft-Hartley Act.[11]

Chapter Six examines several rulings by the Supreme Court which are often cited as supportive of majority-only collective bargaining. Morris reviews the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of association, and how the concepts of indirect state action (as elucidated in NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.S. 449 (1958), and Bates v. City of Little Rock, 361 U.S. 516 (1960), and the test of indirect state action as outlined in Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co., 457 U.S. 922 (1982)), direct state action and compelling government interest protect and affirm members-only minority-union collective bargaining. Morris also discusses three key Supreme Court rulings—NLRB v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 440 U.S. 490 (1979), Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Building & Constr. Trades Council, 485 U.S. 568 (1988) and Communications Workers of America v. Beck, 487 U.S. 735 (1988)—and concludes that they conform to the concept of members-only bargaining as well.

In Chapter Seven, Morris discusses how the Supreme Court's doctrine of "administrative deference" (outlined in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984)) could provide another avenue for judicial articulation of his thesis. Although it is a basic premise of his book that the defined duty to bargain is mandatory under the Act, if the NLRB were to find the applicable language ambiguous it could and should exercise its discretionary authority and require bargaining in accordance with the thesis—which under step two of the Chevron doctrine would be confirmed by a reviewing federal court even if the court were in disagreement, for the determination would not be "arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to the statute."

In Chapter Eight, Morris outlines U.S. obligations under international law. He points out that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Labour Organization's 1998 Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work both compel a construction of the NLRA which protects members-only collective bargaining.[12]

Chapter Nine discusses the current state of NLRB and court rulings which might appear to exclude members-only minority-union collective bargaining. Morris identifies eight "false majority"[13] cases in which the NLRB or a court appears to rule out bargaining with a minority union, but in each of those cases the union was either directly or indirectly seeking to represent the entire bargaining unit as a Section 9(a) majority representative, hence the designation of "false-majority" cases; in none of them did the union actually engage in members-only representation and bargaining. Morris also dismisses four "group-dealing"[14] cases, in which the question was whether an employer has a duty to meet and bargain with groups of nonunion employees under the "mutual aid or protection" language of Section 7. But once more, Morris distinguishes the cases by noting that in none of the cases did the union engage in members-only representation or bargaining as defined by the "collective bargaining" language of Section 7, which is the text that provides minority unions with the right to bargain.

Part III edit

The three chapters of Part III discuss how unions might go about reaffirming the right to engage in members-only minority-union collective bargaining.

Chapter Ten discusses using the NLRB and the courts to reaffirm the minority-union concept. Morris outlines how unions might use NLRB representational procedures or direct court rulings to revitalize the concept of members-only unions. Morris also discusses novel approaches, such as direct legal action against the NLRB's General Counsel and picketing for members-only recognition.[15] Other approaches he suggests include amending a Section 8(a)(3) complaint (made to the NLRB when an employee is discharged for engaging in protected union activity, a fairly common occurrence in NLRB representation elections[16]) to establish the fact of members-only unionization and to force the employer to bargain.[17] He also advocates petitioning the NLRB to engage in administrative rulemaking on the subject, which is the process now pending before the Board in two rulemaking petitions.

Chapter Eleven discussed how unions should establish members-only minority unions. Morris discussed the role of the union steward, Weingarten rights, employer notification, and how to force employers to engage in collective bargaining.

Chapter Twelve concludes the work with a vision of industrial democracy. Morris argues that members-only unions represent the best way to revitalize the American labor movement. He outlines how workplace democracy is stunted without collective bargaining, argues that productivity is greatly enhanced when unions exist, and that strong unions strengthen social capital inside and outside the workplace.

Appendices edit

The book contains two substantive appendices. The first is an appendix to Chapter Two. It contains all the relevant provisions of the proposed 1934 "Labor Disputes" bill and the proposed 1934 "National Adjustment Bill" substitute for S. 2926. Both proposed bills are crucial to understanding the evolving concept of collective bargaining which led to the Wagner Act.

The second appendix is meant to accompany Chapter Three. This appendix contains all relevant portions of the 1935 drafts of the National Labor Relations Act (S. 1958). The drafts provide the critical textual evidence for Morris' legislative history and plain-meaning interpretive arguments.

Scholarly history edit

The scholarly pedigree of The Blue Eagle At Work is somewhat lengthy. Although many in the labor movement saw the treatise as novel, the concept, as Morris noted, was recognized in a law review article as early as 1936[18] and was discussed generally as early as 1975.[19] Morris himself published an early version of his thesis in 1994.[20] But the most prominent and complete statement of the legal theory came from Professor Clyde Summers in 1990 (which Morris acknowledges in his book).[21]

The "Blue Eagle" concept of members-only unions has received additional attention since the early 1990s. Legal scholars addressed the merits of the theory, and discussed its application to a variety of other "pre-union" organizations such as worker centers.[22]

Reviews edit

The Blue Eagle At Work was highly anticipated by many labor scholars, labor attorneys and activists in the labor movement. After its publication, the work was widely reviewed in the scholarly and labor press, including Labor Studies Journal,[23] the Journal of Industrial Relations,[24] WorkingUSA,[25] Labor History,[26] Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law,[27] Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal,[28] LRA Online, Labor Research Association,[29] British Journal of Industrial Relations,[30] Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations,[31] Hawaii Laborer,[32] ILCA Online,[33] Portside,[34] The Progressive Populist,[35] Workday Minnesota,[36] Religious Socialism,[37] All Aboard, NLRB,[38] Labour/Le Travail,[39] Noteworthy Books in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Princeton University,[40] Benson's Union Democracy Blog,[41] University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business and Employment Law,[42] and the Annual Review of Law and Social Science.[43] Some of the reviews expressed greater or lesser degrees of skepticism about the likelihood of Morris' thesis being adopted but praised the work highly.

One reviewer wrote:

There is the potential for private-sector US industrial relations to undergo the biggest change since 1947, or even 1935--all without any new laws or overturning any legal precedents. Not only will many workers obtain union representation when a majority of their co-workers are not interested, but the entire industrial relations environment might be altered. Morris shows how Senator Wagner--the father of the NLRA--viewed minority-unionism as a stepping stone to full-fledged majority unionism, especially as the benefits of union representation are vividly demonstrated to skeptical co-workers. The organizing process can thus change as unions can focus their attention on building organizations rather than winning elections.[44]

Legal analysis edit

The book was widely praised for its scholarship. "[It] is a remarkably compelling, innovative stroke, one which should be taken very seriously by those who wish to see any kind of renaissance for workers' collective power," wrote one reviewer, whose assessment was typical.[45]

Almost all of the labor law professors who have publicly commented on the members-only minority-union bargaining thesis have agreed that the Morris thesis is legally correct. Twenty-five of those professors joined in a letter to the NLRB on August 14, 2007, endorsing the rulemaking petition that was proposing adoption of such a rule. They stated to the Board that

(A) The plain and unambiguous language of the Act guarantees that in workplaces where there is not currently a Section 9(a) majority-exclusive representative in an appropriate bargaining unit, employees have an enforceable right to bargain collectively through minority unions of their own choosing, but for their employee members only.
(B) Such reading of the statute is fully supported by clear and consistent legislative history.[46]

Nevertheless, Morris' theory has been challenged. Although a few of the reviewers disagreed with some of Morris' secondary conclusions, none disagreed with his critical reading of the statutory language on which he relies. One supportive reviewer, Judge John True, wrote: "Nothing in the actual language of the NLRA, in its legislative history, in NLRB or court cases, in the constitution, in international law, or indeed in common sense or sound policy suggests that unions could not still use this 'members-only' bargaining approach." He reads the language of Section 7 as "all inclusive," explaining that

It does not by its terms limit in any way the rights it confers, including "activities for the purpose of collective bargaining," to those who have designated a union as their exclusive representative. The clear language of the statute confers this right on all employees. So as a matter of simple logic, a minority group of employees is entitled to engage in "activities for the purpose of collective bargaining:" including, presumably, the right to make their employer respond to its bargaining demands.[47]

Morris never denied, indeed emphasized, that the ultimate objective of the Act was majority-based collective bargaining.[48] Nevertheless, minority-union bargaining was always protected as a stepping-stone stage of bargaining that could be expected to lead to majority bargaining, which is exactly what happened during the decade following passage of the Act. None of the facts reported by historian Tomlins,[49] on whom one historical criticism was erroneously based[50] indicated the contrary; indeed The Blue Eagle at Work cited Tomlins.[51]

Legislative history and statutory text edit

Morris' interpretation of the NLRA's legislative history and statutory text has come under fire from one scholar in a brief review in a Canadian journal. He presented his opposing opinion, but without any explanatory analysis or cited authority, as follows:

Morris's argument involves close reading of the pre-NLRA administrative cases, and then the successive drafts of the NLRA. ... I was not convinced. While I agree that the NLRB should have required employers to meet with organizations representing only a fraction of their workforce, I do not find a clear Congressional command that requires the Board to do so. Morris shows that, at several stages in the drafting process, such clear language was briefly part of the bill, but was later deleted as part of a general process of simplifying language and delegating detail to the new NLRB. Drafters similarly rejected a proposal that would clearly have restricted the duty to bargain to majority representatives. I read this history to mean that Congress delegated this issue, along with many others, to the new NLRB.[52]

One need only read the statute, however, with or without this history, to conclude that because of the lack of ambiguity in the language, step one of the Chevron doctrine mandates that "[i]f the intent of Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress."[53] The pending rulemaking petition by the Steelworkers Union, et al., now awaiting the NLRB's decision, also notes the following regarding the clear statutory language on which the Morris thesis is based:

in workplaces where the majority/unit condition in Section 9(a) is not activated, the text of the Act guarantees that employees shall have the right to bargain collectively through a minority-union of their choice on a nonexclusive, i.e., members-only, basis; and an employer who refuses to bargain collectively with that union commits an unfair labor practice in violation of Sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(5). This statutory text is not Humpty-Dumpty language that naysayers might say means whatever they "choose it to mean." Rather, it is plain, unambiguous language that means exactly what it says--the same kind of broad and sweeping language that Chief Justice John Roberts referred to when, as a judge on the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, he accurately observed in two separate decisions that "[t]he Supreme Court has consistently instructed that statutes written in broad, sweeping language should be given broad, sweeping application."[54]

Additional evidence indicates that the Congress did intend the NLRA to protect members-only unions, particularly the historical "smoking gun" of Congress having rejected specific language that would have limited bargaining to Section 9(a) majority unions only.

The "false majority" cases edit

Morris' discussion of the "false majority" cases has also been criticized. In a somewhat laudatory piece, Judge John True concluded that Morris read too much into otherwise ambiguous decisions:

A number of the other cases [Morris] characterizes as "false majority" claims feature ambiguities similar to Mooresville Cotton Mills. To be sure, none of them squarely disposes of Morris' interpretation, but neither does any seem like the "myth" and dicta that he says stand in the way of minority bargaining rights.[55]

However, in a response article, Morris pointed out the errors in Judge True's reading of the Moorsville Cotton Mills case.[56]

Constitutional and international law commentary edit

Although Morris bases his thesis on the text of the NLRA, which is supported by legislative history, he also contends that constitutional and international law provide additional support. Some have argued that Morris' constitutional arguments based on freedom of association are not valid under current case law. One commentator takes issue with Morris' claim that collective bargaining under the NLRA constitutes direct or indirect state action,[57] and also points out that Morris' reliance on international law is a weak reed. As Morris himself admits, "it is widely known and fully documented that the United States does not comply with ILO standards regarding the right of workers to engage in collective bargaining."[58] Morris also admits that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights does not permit private citizens to sue in U.S. courts,[59] but he explains, however, that the language of the Covenant and the features of its ratification permit raising the issue in NLRB cases.[60] Despite his criticism of Morris' constitutional and international law analyses, this reviewer agreed with Morris' primary analysis based on the wording of the NLRA, stating that "Section 7 protects concerted activities in various contexts by employees where there is no exclusive representative, and the language of section 7 itself does seem to provide for MUB [i.e., minority union bargaining]."[61]

Pragmatic issues edit

Several reviewers have pointed out that Morris' prescriptions for reaffirming members-only minority-union collective bargaining contain problems of their own. They applaud Morris for crafting some inventive and aggressive strategies and tactics.

One problem some commentators have noted is that members-only collective bargaining creates problems of competition within the workplace. Employers may not respond favorably when a proposed solution will force them to alter work rules and personnel policies across the entire workforce. As one reviewer argued: "Bargaining over wages for members only or a grievance procedure for members only may be possible. Many subjects will have an effect upon non-members and potentially all other non-represented employees. Such issues may adversely impact non-members who do not want representation."[62] On the other hand, the same problems—if they are problems—could also exist where voluntary recognition and bargaining occurs with a members-only minority union, which is unquestionably legal under the Act. That was conceded by the General Counsel in the Dick's case Advice Memorandum.[63]

Action by the NLRB edit

The NLRB has not yet considered or acted upon Morris' thesis. In 2006, the United Steelworkers organized a members-only minority union at Dick's Sporting Goods, a sporting-goods retailer located near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Director of the NLRB's Region 6 asked the NLRB General Counsel's Division of Advice for guidance and received an "Advice Memorandum",[64] on the legal merits of the case. In the Advice Memorandum, Associate General Counsel Barry J. Kearney of the Division of Advice rejected the argument that the NLRA contained an affirmative duty to bargain with members-only minority unions.[65] That Memorandum has been challenged by the two rulemaking petitions now pending before the NLRB.

In his quarterly review of the activities of the Office of the General Counsel, Ronald Meisburg reiterated his conclusion that the NLRA does not require employers to bargain with members-only minority unions.

When Congress enacted Section 9(a), which sets forth the majority rule, it explicitly rejected other forms of representation, including plural and proportional representation, which were permitted under Section 7(a) of the NIRA. Statements by the Act's sponsors show that they did not intend to require employee representation by minority-supported unions because it could not lead to a working system of collective bargaining. ... In the early enforcement of the Act, the Board held that an employer may recognize and bargain with a minority, members-only union, as long as the employer does not extend that union exclusive status. Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, 4 NLRB 71, 110 (1937), enfd. 95 F.2d 390 (2d Cir.), modified on other grounds 305 U.S. 197 (1938). However, nothing in the statutory language, legislative history of the Act, or decisions interpreting the Act, establish an employer's duty to do so. ... Rather, the statutory language, the legislative history, and Board and Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Act all mandate the conclusion that an employer is not required to bargain with a union seeking to bargain as a minority representative for its members.[66]

That assertion was challenged by the rulemaking petition of the Steelworkers Union, et al., now pending before the NLRB,[67] which noted that "not one sentence in either the Advice Memorandum or the Regional Director's Dismissal Letter" in the Dick's case presented any discussion of statutory language other than to reiterate the Morris reading without presenting any disagreement with that reading. It noted further that the Memorandum never addressed the relevant legislative history, particularly the "smoking gun" revelation. Regarding the alleged Board and Supreme Court cases, it pointed out that they are non-existent, for there are no cases holding that minority-bargaining for members only where there is not yet a majority representative is either legal or illegal, and the General Counsel was unable to cite any.

Unions appear determined to bring their case to the NLRB. Because the General Counsel's refusal to issue a complaint is not deemed subject to review, in order to bring the issue before the Board the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union, AFL-CIO (Steelworkers Union), joined by six other unions, on August 14, 2007, petitioned the NLRB in a substantive rulemaking case for issuance of the following rule:

Pursuant to Sections 7, 8(a)(1), and 8(a)(5) of the Act, in workplaces where employees are not currently represented by a certified or recognized Section 9(a) majority/exclusive collective-bargaining representative in an appropriate bargaining unit, the employer, upon request, has a duty to bargain collectively with a labor organization that represents less than an employee-majority with regard to the employees who are its members, but not for any other employees.[68]

The six unions that joined with the Steelworkers Union were the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Communication Workers of America, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, California Nurses Association, and United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America.[68] Following the filing of that petition, on August 14, 2007, 25 university professors of labor law submitted a letter to the NLRB indicating their agreement with the legal premise of the Steelworkers' petition and urged the Board to issue the rule proposed in that petition.[68] On January 4, 2008, the Change to Win union federation, on behalf of its seven affiliated unions, to wit, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Laborers' International Union of North America, Service Employees International Union, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, United Farm Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, and UNITE HERE,[68] filed another rulemaking petition requesting the NLRB to issue the above proposed rule. The proposed rule is thus now backed by several major AFL-CIO unions, one independent union, and all of the CTW unions with their six million members. These petitioning unions represent the overwhelming majority of all private sector union members in the United States who are subject to the NLRA.

 
The NRA Blue Eagle

Title edit

The title of the book refers to the symbol adopted by the National Recovery Administration. The National Industrial Recovery Act was enacted by Congress in 1933 to stimulate the American economy and help the nation recover from the Great Depression. The law created the NRA to administer the act. Section 7(a) of the Act promoted the formation of labor unions, and created a tremendous upsurge of union organizing.

The NRA adopted the "Blue Eagle" icon as its symbol.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 26-31.
  2. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 36-40.
  3. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 48-52.
  4. ^ National Lock Co., 1 NLB (Part 2) 15 (1934); Bee Line Bus Co., 1 NLB (Part 2) 24 (1934); Eagle Rubber Co., 1 NLB (Part 2) 31 (1934).
  5. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 62-63.
  6. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 81.
  7. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 87.
  8. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 88.
  9. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 88 (emphasis in original).
  10. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 94-97.
  11. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 97-98.
  12. ^ The concept is one advocated by the AFL-CIO as well during a series of rallies on Human Rights Day in December 2005. See: Rodriguez, "Union Supporters Picket White House," Associated Press, December 9, 2005; Greenhouse, "Labor to Press for Workers' Right to Join Unions," New York Times, December 9, 2005; "Labor Group to Celebrate World Human Rights Day," Huntington Herald-Dispatch, December 10, 2005.
  13. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 159.
  14. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 162.
  15. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 173-181.
  16. ^ Castillo, "Workers at Labor Forum Recount Tales of Abuse by Their Employers," Austin American-Statesman, October 19, 2005; Gaffney, "American Laws Violate Workers' Rights," Detroit News, December 16, 2005; Knowles, "Report Says Deck Stacked Against Union Organization," Chicago Sun-Times, December 7, 2005; Landrum, "American Rights at Work to Investigate Abuses at Workplace," Associated Press, October 14, 2005; Lester, "AFL-CIO Leaders Recruit Groups to Get Out Word About Workers' Plight," Associated Press, October 25, 2005.
  17. ^ Discharges are a mandatory subject of bargaining under the NLRA. See Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 181-182.
  18. ^ Latham, "Legislative Purpose and Administrative Policy under the National Labor Relations Act," George Washington Law Review, 1936, pp. 433, 453 & 456 n. 65.
  19. ^ Schatzki, "Majority Rule, Exclusive Representation, and the Interests of Individual Workers: Should Exclusivity Be Abolished?", University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 1975.
  20. ^ Morris, "A Blueprint for Reform of the National Labor Relations Act," Administrative Law Journal of the American University, 1994, pp. 517, 554-555.
  21. ^ Summers, "Unions Without Majority - A Black Hole?", Chicago-Kent Law Review, 1990.
  22. ^ Carlson, "The Origin and Future of Exclusive Representation in American Labor Law," Duquesne Law Review, 1992; Hyde, et al., "After Smyrna: Rights and Powers of Unions That Represent Less Than A Majority," Rutgers Law Review, 1993; Finkin, "The Road Not Taken: Some Thoughts On Nonmajority Employee Representation," Chicago-Kent Law Review, 1993; Estlund, "Rebuilding the Law of the Workplace In An Era of Self-Regulation," Columbia Law Review, 2005.
  23. ^ Schur, "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace (review)," Labor Studies Journal, Spring 2006.
  24. ^ Block, "Book Review: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Journal of Industrial Relations, Autumn 2005.
  25. ^ Freeman, "The Blue Eagle as Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," WorkingUSA, September 2005.
  26. ^ Review: "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Labor History, 2005, p. 531.
  27. ^ True, "Review Essay: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2005, p. 181.
  28. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing A Minority Of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively: A Review of Charles Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work," Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 383.
  29. ^ Herbst, "Review: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," LRA Online, Labor Research Association, 6/10/05.
  30. ^ Budd, "Book Review: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," British Journal of Industrial Relations, June 2007, p. 326.
  31. ^ Gerin-Lajoie, "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations, 2005, p. 823.
  32. ^ Lardizabal, "Minority-Union Members-Only Collective Bargaining," Hawaii Laborer, Dec. 2005, p. 6.
  33. ^ Zipser, The Newspaper Guild, "Two Reviews: Blue Eagle and Troublemakers," ILCA Online, Feb. 15, 2005.
  34. ^ Cohen, "Minority Union Bargaining--'The Blue Eagle at Work'--a Book Review," Portside, Jan. 8, 2005.
  35. ^ Newman, "A Union in Every Workplace," Progressive Populist, June 15, 2005.
  36. ^ Beer, "Book Review: Time to Re-examine an Old Method of Organizing," Workday Minnesota, Sept. 17, 2005; Katz, "Analysis: Unions Turn to 'Blue Eagle' Organizing Tool," Workday Minnesota, Sept. 17, 2005; Budd, "Book Review: An Answer to Labor's Prayers?," Workday Minnesota, Sept. 19, 2005.
  37. ^ Benson, "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Religious Socialism, Vol. 29, No. 4, 2005.
  38. ^ Parker, "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," All Aboard, NLRB, June 2005, p.11.
  39. ^ Hyde, "Review: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Labour/Le Travail, Spring 2006, p. 230.
  40. ^ "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Noteworthy Books in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Princeton University, July 2006.
  41. ^ Benson, "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Benson's Union Democracy Blog, Nov. 2, 2005.
  42. ^ O'Brien, "When Union Members in a Members-Only Non-Majority Union (MONMU) Want Weingarten Rights: How High Will the Blue Eagle Fly?" University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business and Employment Law, 2008, p. 599.
  43. ^ Estlund, Cynthia L. (2006). "The Death of Labor Law?". Annual Review of Law and Social Science. 2: 105–123. doi:10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.2.081805.110015. S2CID 154534298.
  44. ^ Budd, "Book Review: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," British Journal of Industrial Relations, June 2007, p. 328.
  45. ^ True, "Review Essay: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace: Professor Charles J. Morris," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2005, p. 189.
  46. ^ "Workplace Prof Blog".
  47. ^ True, "Review Essay: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2005, pp. 184 & 190.
  48. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 69 & 101.
  49. ^ Tomlins, The State and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960, 1985.
  50. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing A Minority Of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively: A Review Of Charles Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work," Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 390.
  51. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, pp. 250 note 89 and 350 notes 139 & 141.
  52. ^ Hyde, "Reviews/Comptes Rendus: Charles J. Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace," Labour/Le Travail, Spring 2006, p. 230.
  53. ^ Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984).
  54. ^ In re England, Secretary of the Navy, 375 F.3d 1159, 1179 (D.C. Cir. 2004); Consumers Electronics Ass'n v. Federal Communications Commission, 347 F.3d 291, 298 (D.C. Cir. 2003).
  55. ^ True, "Review Essay: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace: Professor Charles J. Morris," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2005, p.195 (footnotes omitted).
  56. ^ Morris, "Review Essay: Minority Union Collective Bargaining: A Commentary on John True's Review Essay on The Blue Eagle at Work, and a Reply to Skeptics Regarding Members-Only Bargaining Under the NLRA," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2006, pp. 179, 183-186.
  57. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively?: A Review of Charles Morris' 'The Blue Eagle At Work'," Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 396-397.
  58. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively?: A Review of Charles Morris' 'The Blue Eagle At Work,'" Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 399, quoting Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work, p. 151.
  59. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively?: A Review of Charles Morris' 'The Blue Eagle At Work'," Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 399, quoting Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work, p. 146.
  60. ^ Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace, 2005, p. 146.
  61. ^ Slater, "Do Unions Representing a Minority of Employees Have the Right to Bargain Collectively?: A Review of Charles Morris, The Blue Eagle At Work," Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal, 2005, p. 403.
  62. ^ Rosenfeld, "Review Essay: Worker Centers: Emerging Labor Organizations - Until They Confront the National Labor Relations Act," Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 2006, p. 506.
  63. ^ Dick's Sporting Goods Advice Memorandum, Case 6-CA-34821, June 22, 2006, p.11.
  64. ^ A legal memorandum giving guidance on a specific case, almost always involving a difficult or novel issue of law, in response to a query from the Regional Director whether to (a) find merit to a charge and issue a complaint in the case, or (b) find the charge lacks merit and dismiss it. When the General Counsel instructs a Regional Director to find merit and issue a complaint, the legal analysis set forth in the Advice Memorandum becomes the theory on which the General Counsel litigates the case, and the Memorandum is not public information until the case concludes. When the General Counsel instructs a Regional Director to find a charge lacks merit and dismiss it, dismissal will be based on the legal analysis in the Memorandum and the Memorandum will be publicly available shortly thereafter. Since the General Counsel investigates charges and presents those that it judges possess merit to the five-member Board (or its Administrative Law Judges) for adjudication, an Advice Memorandum does not reflect the views of the Board, but indicates the types of issues the General Counsel is likely to present to the Board.
  65. ^ Dick's Sporting Goods, Advice Memorandum, Case 6-CA-34821, June 22, 2006.
  66. ^ Meisburg, Memorandum GC 07-02: Report on Case Developments, April through August 2006, December 15, 2006.
  67. ^ Greenhouse, "Seven Unions Ask Labor Board to Order Employers to Bargain," New York Times, August 15, 2007; "Let Workers Decide," Spartanburg Herald Journal, August 27, 2007.
  68. ^ a b c d "Change to Win Joins Other Unions Seeking Rule on Minority-Union Bargaining," Daily Labor Report (BNA), Jan. 8, 2008.

References edit

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  • Dick's Sporting Goods, Advice Memorandum, Case 6-CA-34821. Office of the General Counsel. National Labor Relations Board. June 22, 2006. Accessed August 16, 2007.
  • Estlund, Cynthia L. "The Death of Labor Law?" Annual Review of Law and Social Science. 2 (December 2006).
  • Estlund, Cynthia L. "Rebuilding the Law of the Workplace In An Era of Self-Regulation." Columbia Law Review. 105:319 (2005).
  • Finkin, Matthew. "The Road Not Taken: Some Thoughts On Nonmajority Employee Representation." Chicago-Kent Law Review. 69:195 (1993).
  • Freeman, Harris. "The Blue Eagle as Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace." WorkingUSA. 8:5 (September 2005).
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  • Greenhouse, Steven. "Labor to Press for Workers' Right to Join Unions." New York Times. December 9, 2005.
  • Greenhouse, Steven. "Seven Unions Ask Labor Board to Order Employers to Bargain." New York Times. August 15, 2007.
  • Gross, James A. The Making of the National Labor Relations Board: A Study in Economics, Politics, and the Law, 1933-37. Reprint ed. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1981. ISBN 0-87395-270-7.
  • Hyde, Alan. "Reviews/Comptes Rendus: Charles J. Morris, The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace." Labour/Le Travail. Spring 2006.
  • Hyde, Alan, et al. "After Smyrna: Rights and Powers of Unions That Represent Less Than A Majority." Rutgers Law Review. 45:637 (1993).
  • Knowles, Francine. "Report Says Deck Stacked Against Union Organization." Chicago Sun-Times. December 7, 2005.
  • "Labor Group to Celebrate World Human Rights Day." Huntington Herald-Dispatch. December 10, 2005.
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  • "Let Workers Decide." Spartanburg Herald Journal. August 27, 2007.
  • Accessed August 16, 2007.
  • Morris, Charles. The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8014-4317-2
  • Morris, Charles. "A Blueprint for Reform of the National Labor Relations Act." Administrative Law Journal of the American University. (1994).
  • Morris, Charles. "Review Essay: Minority Union Collective Bargaining: A Commentary on John True's Review Essay on The Blue Eagle at Work, and a Reply to Skeptics Regarding Members-Only Bargaining Under the NLRA." Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law. (2006).
  • Rodriguez, Juan-Carlos. "Union Supporters Picket White House." Associated Press. December 9, 2005.
  • Rosenfeld, David. "Review Essay: Worker Centers: Emerging Labor Organizations - Until They Confront the National Labor Relations Act." Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law. 27:469 (2006).
  • Schatzki, George. "Majority Rule, Exclusive Representation, and the Interests of Individual Workers: Should Exclusivity Be Abolished?" University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 123:897 (1975).
  • Schur, Lisa. "The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace (review)." Labor Studies Journal. 31:1 (Spring 2006).
  • Slater, Joseph E. "Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively?: A Review of Charles Morris' 'The Blue Eagle At Work'." Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal. 9:383 (2005).
  • Summers, Clyde. "Unions Without Majority - A Black Hole?" Chicago-Kent Law Review. 66:531 (1990).
  • Tomlins, Christopher L. The State and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985. ISBN 0-521-31452-6
  • True, John M. "Review Essay: The Blue Eagle at Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace: Professor Charles J. Morris." Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law. 26:181 (2005).

blue, eagle, work, reclaiming, democratic, rights, american, workplace, legal, treatise, written, charles, morris, which, analyzes, collective, bargaining, under, national, labor, relations, nlra, federal, statute, governing, most, private, sector, labor, rela. The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace is a legal treatise written by Charles J Morris which analyzes collective bargaining under the National Labor Relations Act NLRA the federal statute governing most private sector labor relations in the United States Published in 2005 by Cornell University Press the text claims that the NLRA guarantees that employees under that Act have the right to bargain collectively through minority unions but only on a members only basis in workplaces where there is not an established majority union notwithstanding that the present practice and general understanding of the law is that only majority union employees are entitled to engage in collective bargaining on an exclusivity basis Contracts resulting from such minority union bargaining would apply to union members only not to other employees The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American WorkplaceAuthorCharles J MorrisSubjectLabor relations in the United StatesPublished2005 Cornell University Press ISBN0 8014 4317 2 Contents 1 Structure of the book 1 1 Part I 1 2 Part II 1 3 Part III 1 4 Appendices 2 Scholarly history 3 Reviews 4 Legal analysis 4 1 Legislative history and statutory text 4 2 The false majority cases 4 3 Constitutional and international law commentary 4 4 Pragmatic issues 5 Action by the NLRB 6 Title 7 Notes 8 ReferencesStructure of the book editThe Blue Eagle At Work contains three parts 1 An overview of collective bargaining law in the U S 2 The legal framework in which members only collective bargaining could occur and 3 How unions could implement and strengthen members only collective bargaining and use it as a strategic organizing tool Part I edit Part I of the book addresses collective bargaining law in the United States It is broken down into four chapters Chapter One provides a historical overview of the rise of membership based collective bargaining in the period prior to federal recognition of the right to bargain collectively the provisions of the Norris LaGuardia Act and the enactment and legal meaning of Section 7 a of the National Industrial Recovery Act NIRA Attention is paid to The Conference Board survey of labor relations conducted in November 1933 1 Morris points out that the survey results indicate that members only recognition and bargaining were common when the NLRA was enacted Chapter Two provides an in depth and exceedingly detailed history of legislative attempts to enact improvements in federal labor law The chapter provides an extensive analysis of the nine legislative drafts of Senator Robert F Wagner D NY for his 1934 bill The chapter also discusses the implementation of the NIRA under first the National Recovery Administration NRA and then the National Labor Board and the National Labor Relations Board NLRB Morris documents how the concepts of representational exclusivity and majoritarianism were developed in cases such as Denver Tramway Corporation 1 NLB 63 1934 2 and Houde Engineering Corp 1 NLRB old 35 1934 3 and cites cases showing that employers refusing to bargain with a minority union violated the NIRA 4 Chapter Three is an extensive consideration of the legislative history of Wagner Act The three drafts of the Act committee hearings floor debates and committee reports are closely examined to tease out the meanings of the changes made Morris uncovered one feature that required no teasing a smoking gun that shows that congress clearly intended that collective bargaining would not be confined to majority unions only to wit the deliberate rejection of a version of the duty to bargain contained in Section 8 a 5 that would have so confined the bargaining process Instead the present wording which does not so limit the bargaining obligation was selected 5 Morris notes that the Senate committee and debate statements disparaging minority or plurality bargaining all referred to bargaining after a majority representative had been chosen None referred to bargaining before majority selection which was not a controversial issue Chapter Four contains the history of members only minority union organizing and bargaining during the decade following passage of the NLRA and what followed Morris notes For several years following the passage of the Wagner Act in 1935 there was never any legal question raised as to the scope of its bargaining requirements either as to minority union members only bargaining or majority union exclusivity bargaining Both types of bargaining had prevailed earlier under the Blue Eagle administration of Section 7 a of the NIRA and both were now widely accepted under the new NLRA 6 Morris points to the organizing history of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee and United Auto Workers as prime examples of members only organizing and collective bargaining and cites statistics from Bureau of National Affairs BNA and Twentieth Century Fund reports which document the widespread use and acceptance of members only contracts Morris concludes that several factors led unions to become dependent on representational elections The NLRB itself favored representational elections for they provided a relatively simple pattern for bargaining unit determinations conduct of elections and certification of majorities for exclusive union representation 7 The conflict between the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations refocused attention away from organizing The rapid expansion of unions during World War II and the massive waves of strikes which came after the war continued to divert attention away from organizing Morris also argues that the Taft Hartley Act led to the phenomenon of unions becoming busily engaged in a multitude of legal defensive actions generated by the numerous union restrictions that the new law had created 8 As a consequence Morris concludes only a few years after Taft Hartley the NLRB and its union and employer constituents were routinely viewing majority union bargaining which was certainly the ultimate goal intended by the Act as the only bargaining contemplated by the Act Although unions had originally favored NLRB elections out of sheer convenience their reliance on the election process had now become routine with attendant misunderstanding of the true scope of bargaining offered by the statute Thus was born the latter day conventional wisdom that assumes that majority union representation is the sine qua non of collective bargaining 9 Part II edit Part II of The Blue Eagle At Work examines the legal interpretation of Sections 1 7 8 a 1 8 a 3 8 a 5 and 9 a of the NLRA and concludes that Morris construction of the law is consistent with the statutory requirements and also with existing legal rulings and treaty obligations Part II consists of five chapters Chapter Five engages in a Plain Meaning Rule construction of the language of Section 7 a and the NLRA Morris examines Section 7 Section 8 a 1 Section 9 a and Section 8 a 5 of the NLRB for their plain meaning and concludes they guarantee the right of all employees to bargain collectively whether before or after majority union designation Bargaining before such selection must be for members only through a union of the employees choice bargaining after majority selection must be for all employees in the bargaining unit through the selected union only This chapter provides the heart of Morris thesis for although it is supported by legislative history and constitutional and international law its primary basis is contained in the unambiguous text of the statute The critical language is short simple and of clear meaning Fourteen words in Section 7 borrowed verbatim from Section 7 a of the NIRA provide that Employees shall have the right to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing This is guaranteed and enforced by Section 8 a 1 and reinforced by Section 8 a 5 which by its clear wording and its smoking gun legislative history requires bargaining both before and after majority selection The only limitation on this bargaining right is a conditional limitation on the choice of representatives but not on the duty to bargain This limitation is contained in Section 9 a which does not operate unless there is a majority representative in which event the selected majority union becomes the exclusive representative Morris points out that both the Supreme Court and the NLRB have approved minority and members only bargaining and resulting members only contracts 10 where they exist voluntarily and that the time is now ripe for a decision confirming that such bargaining is enforceable where there is not yet a majority representative This universal concept of collective bargaining conforms to the policy of the United States expressed in Section 1 of the Act which policy was expressly reconfirmed in the Taft Hartley Act 11 Chapter Six examines several rulings by the Supreme Court which are often cited as supportive of majority only collective bargaining Morris reviews the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of association and how the concepts of indirect state action as elucidated in NAACP v Alabama 357 U S 449 1958 and Bates v City of Little Rock 361 U S 516 1960 and the test of indirect state action as outlined in Lugar v Edmondson Oil Co 457 U S 922 1982 direct state action and compelling government interest protect and affirm members only minority union collective bargaining Morris also discusses three key Supreme Court rulings NLRB v Catholic Bishop of Chicago 440 U S 490 1979 Edward J DeBartolo Corp v Florida Gulf Coast Building amp Constr Trades Council 485 U S 568 1988 and Communications Workers of America v Beck 487 U S 735 1988 and concludes that they conform to the concept of members only bargaining as well In Chapter Seven Morris discusses how the Supreme Court s doctrine of administrative deference outlined in Chevron U S A Inc v Natural Resources Defense Council Inc 467 U S 837 1984 could provide another avenue for judicial articulation of his thesis Although it is a basic premise of his book that the defined duty to bargain is mandatory under the Act if the NLRB were to find the applicable language ambiguous it could and should exercise its discretionary authority and require bargaining in accordance with the thesis which under step two of the Chevron doctrine would be confirmed by a reviewing federal court even if the court were in disagreement for the determination would not be arbitrary capricious or manifestly contrary to the statute In Chapter Eight Morris outlines U S obligations under international law He points out that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Labour Organization s 1998 Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work both compel a construction of the NLRA which protects members only collective bargaining 12 Chapter Nine discusses the current state of NLRB and court rulings which might appear to exclude members only minority union collective bargaining Morris identifies eight false majority 13 cases in which the NLRB or a court appears to rule out bargaining with a minority union but in each of those cases the union was either directly or indirectly seeking to represent the entire bargaining unit as a Section 9 a majority representative hence the designation of false majority cases in none of them did the union actually engage in members only representation and bargaining Morris also dismisses four group dealing 14 cases in which the question was whether an employer has a duty to meet and bargain with groups of nonunion employees under the mutual aid or protection language of Section 7 But once more Morris distinguishes the cases by noting that in none of the cases did the union engage in members only representation or bargaining as defined by the collective bargaining language of Section 7 which is the text that provides minority unions with the right to bargain Part III edit The three chapters of Part III discuss how unions might go about reaffirming the right to engage in members only minority union collective bargaining Chapter Ten discusses using the NLRB and the courts to reaffirm the minority union concept Morris outlines how unions might use NLRB representational procedures or direct court rulings to revitalize the concept of members only unions Morris also discusses novel approaches such as direct legal action against the NLRB s General Counsel and picketing for members only recognition 15 Other approaches he suggests include amending a Section 8 a 3 complaint made to the NLRB when an employee is discharged for engaging in protected union activity a fairly common occurrence in NLRB representation elections 16 to establish the fact of members only unionization and to force the employer to bargain 17 He also advocates petitioning the NLRB to engage in administrative rulemaking on the subject which is the process now pending before the Board in two rulemaking petitions Chapter Eleven discussed how unions should establish members only minority unions Morris discussed the role of the union steward Weingarten rights employer notification and how to force employers to engage in collective bargaining Chapter Twelve concludes the work with a vision of industrial democracy Morris argues that members only unions represent the best way to revitalize the American labor movement He outlines how workplace democracy is stunted without collective bargaining argues that productivity is greatly enhanced when unions exist and that strong unions strengthen social capital inside and outside the workplace Appendices edit The book contains two substantive appendices The first is an appendix to Chapter Two It contains all the relevant provisions of the proposed 1934 Labor Disputes bill and the proposed 1934 National Adjustment Bill substitute for S 2926 Both proposed bills are crucial to understanding the evolving concept of collective bargaining which led to the Wagner Act The second appendix is meant to accompany Chapter Three This appendix contains all relevant portions of the 1935 drafts of the National Labor Relations Act S 1958 The drafts provide the critical textual evidence for Morris legislative history and plain meaning interpretive arguments Scholarly history editThe scholarly pedigree of The Blue Eagle At Work is somewhat lengthy Although many in the labor movement saw the treatise as novel the concept as Morris noted was recognized in a law review article as early as 1936 18 and was discussed generally as early as 1975 19 Morris himself published an early version of his thesis in 1994 20 But the most prominent and complete statement of the legal theory came from Professor Clyde Summers in 1990 which Morris acknowledges in his book 21 The Blue Eagle concept of members only unions has received additional attention since the early 1990s Legal scholars addressed the merits of the theory and discussed its application to a variety of other pre union organizations such as worker centers 22 Reviews editThe Blue Eagle At Work was highly anticipated by many labor scholars labor attorneys and activists in the labor movement After its publication the work was widely reviewed in the scholarly and labor press including Labor Studies Journal 23 the Journal of Industrial Relations 24 WorkingUSA 25 Labor History 26 Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 27 Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 28 LRA Online Labor Research Association 29 British Journal of Industrial Relations 30 Relations Industrielles Industrial Relations 31 Hawaii Laborer 32 ILCA Online 33 Portside 34 The Progressive Populist 35 Workday Minnesota 36 Religious Socialism 37 All Aboard NLRB 38 Labour Le Travail 39 Noteworthy Books in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics Princeton University 40 Benson s Union Democracy Blog 41 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business and Employment Law 42 and the Annual Review of Law and Social Science 43 Some of the reviews expressed greater or lesser degrees of skepticism about the likelihood of Morris thesis being adopted but praised the work highly One reviewer wrote There is the potential for private sector US industrial relations to undergo the biggest change since 1947 or even 1935 all without any new laws or overturning any legal precedents Not only will many workers obtain union representation when a majority of their co workers are not interested but the entire industrial relations environment might be altered Morris shows how Senator Wagner the father of the NLRA viewed minority unionism as a stepping stone to full fledged majority unionism especially as the benefits of union representation are vividly demonstrated to skeptical co workers The organizing process can thus change as unions can focus their attention on building organizations rather than winning elections 44 Legal analysis editThe book was widely praised for its scholarship It is a remarkably compelling innovative stroke one which should be taken very seriously by those who wish to see any kind of renaissance for workers collective power wrote one reviewer whose assessment was typical 45 Almost all of the labor law professors who have publicly commented on the members only minority union bargaining thesis have agreed that the Morris thesis is legally correct Twenty five of those professors joined in a letter to the NLRB on August 14 2007 endorsing the rulemaking petition that was proposing adoption of such a rule They stated to the Board that A The plain and unambiguous language of the Act guarantees that in workplaces where there is not currently a Section 9 a majority exclusive representative in an appropriate bargaining unit employees have an enforceable right to bargain collectively through minority unions of their own choosing but for their employee members only B Such reading of the statute is fully supported by clear and consistent legislative history 46 Nevertheless Morris theory has been challenged Although a few of the reviewers disagreed with some of Morris secondary conclusions none disagreed with his critical reading of the statutory language on which he relies One supportive reviewer Judge John True wrote Nothing in the actual language of the NLRA in its legislative history in NLRB or court cases in the constitution in international law or indeed in common sense or sound policy suggests that unions could not still use this members only bargaining approach He reads the language of Section 7 as all inclusive explaining that It does not by its terms limit in any way the rights it confers including activities for the purpose of collective bargaining to those who have designated a union as their exclusive representative The clear language of the statute confers this right on all employees So as a matter of simple logic a minority group of employees is entitled to engage in activities for the purpose of collective bargaining including presumably the right to make their employer respond to its bargaining demands 47 Morris never denied indeed emphasized that the ultimate objective of the Act was majority based collective bargaining 48 Nevertheless minority union bargaining was always protected as a stepping stone stage of bargaining that could be expected to lead to majority bargaining which is exactly what happened during the decade following passage of the Act None of the facts reported by historian Tomlins 49 on whom one historical criticism was erroneously based 50 indicated the contrary indeed The Blue Eagle at Work cited Tomlins 51 Legislative history and statutory text edit Morris interpretation of the NLRA s legislative history and statutory text has come under fire from one scholar in a brief review in a Canadian journal He presented his opposing opinion but without any explanatory analysis or cited authority as follows Morris s argument involves close reading of the pre NLRA administrative cases and then the successive drafts of the NLRA I was not convinced While I agree that the NLRB should have required employers to meet with organizations representing only a fraction of their workforce I do not find a clear Congressional command that requires the Board to do so Morris shows that at several stages in the drafting process such clear language was briefly part of the bill but was later deleted as part of a general process of simplifying language and delegating detail to the new NLRB Drafters similarly rejected a proposal that would clearly have restricted the duty to bargain to majority representatives I read this history to mean that Congress delegated this issue along with many others to the new NLRB 52 One need only read the statute however with or without this history to conclude that because of the lack of ambiguity in the language step one of the Chevron doctrine mandates that i f the intent of Congress is clear that is the end of the matter for the court as well as the agency must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress 53 The pending rulemaking petition by the Steelworkers Union et al now awaiting the NLRB s decision also notes the following regarding the clear statutory language on which the Morris thesis is based in workplaces where the majority unit condition in Section 9 a is not activated the text of the Act guarantees that employees shall have the right to bargain collectively through a minority union of their choice on a nonexclusive i e members only basis and an employer who refuses to bargain collectively with that union commits an unfair labor practice in violation of Sections 8 a 1 and 8 a 5 This statutory text is not Humpty Dumpty language that naysayers might say means whatever they choose it to mean Rather it is plain unambiguous language that means exactly what it says the same kind of broad and sweeping language that Chief Justice John Roberts referred to when as a judge on the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals he accurately observed in two separate decisions that t he Supreme Court has consistently instructed that statutes written in broad sweeping language should be given broad sweeping application 54 Additional evidence indicates that the Congress did intend the NLRA to protect members only unions particularly the historical smoking gun of Congress having rejected specific language that would have limited bargaining to Section 9 a majority unions only The false majority cases edit Morris discussion of the false majority cases has also been criticized In a somewhat laudatory piece Judge John True concluded that Morris read too much into otherwise ambiguous decisions A number of the other cases Morris characterizes as false majority claims feature ambiguities similar to Mooresville Cotton Mills To be sure none of them squarely disposes of Morris interpretation but neither does any seem like the myth and dicta that he says stand in the way of minority bargaining rights 55 However in a response article Morris pointed out the errors in Judge True s reading of the Moorsville Cotton Mills case 56 Constitutional and international law commentary edit Although Morris bases his thesis on the text of the NLRA which is supported by legislative history he also contends that constitutional and international law provide additional support Some have argued that Morris constitutional arguments based on freedom of association are not valid under current case law One commentator takes issue with Morris claim that collective bargaining under the NLRA constitutes direct or indirect state action 57 and also points out that Morris reliance on international law is a weak reed As Morris himself admits it is widely known and fully documented that the United States does not comply with ILO standards regarding the right of workers to engage in collective bargaining 58 Morris also admits that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights does not permit private citizens to sue in U S courts 59 but he explains however that the language of the Covenant and the features of its ratification permit raising the issue in NLRB cases 60 Despite his criticism of Morris constitutional and international law analyses this reviewer agreed with Morris primary analysis based on the wording of the NLRA stating that Section 7 protects concerted activities in various contexts by employees where there is no exclusive representative and the language of section 7 itself does seem to provide for MUB i e minority union bargaining 61 Pragmatic issues edit Several reviewers have pointed out that Morris prescriptions for reaffirming members only minority union collective bargaining contain problems of their own They applaud Morris for crafting some inventive and aggressive strategies and tactics One problem some commentators have noted is that members only collective bargaining creates problems of competition within the workplace Employers may not respond favorably when a proposed solution will force them to alter work rules and personnel policies across the entire workforce As one reviewer argued Bargaining over wages for members only or a grievance procedure for members only may be possible Many subjects will have an effect upon non members and potentially all other non represented employees Such issues may adversely impact non members who do not want representation 62 On the other hand the same problems if they are problems could also exist where voluntary recognition and bargaining occurs with a members only minority union which is unquestionably legal under the Act That was conceded by the General Counsel in the Dick s case Advice Memorandum 63 Action by the NLRB editThe NLRB has not yet considered or acted upon Morris thesis In 2006 the United Steelworkers organized a members only minority union at Dick s Sporting Goods a sporting goods retailer located near Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The Director of the NLRB s Region 6 asked the NLRB General Counsel s Division of Advice for guidance and received an Advice Memorandum 64 on the legal merits of the case In the Advice Memorandum Associate General Counsel Barry J Kearney of the Division of Advice rejected the argument that the NLRA contained an affirmative duty to bargain with members only minority unions 65 That Memorandum has been challenged by the two rulemaking petitions now pending before the NLRB In his quarterly review of the activities of the Office of the General Counsel Ronald Meisburg reiterated his conclusion that the NLRA does not require employers to bargain with members only minority unions When Congress enacted Section 9 a which sets forth the majority rule it explicitly rejected other forms of representation including plural and proportional representation which were permitted under Section 7 a of the NIRA Statements by the Act s sponsors show that they did not intend to require employee representation by minority supported unions because it could not lead to a working system of collective bargaining In the early enforcement of the Act the Board held that an employer may recognize and bargain with a minority members only union as long as the employer does not extend that union exclusive status Consolidated Edison Co of New York 4 NLRB 71 110 1937 enfd 95 F 2d 390 2d Cir modified on other grounds 305 U S 197 1938 However nothing in the statutory language legislative history of the Act or decisions interpreting the Act establish an employer s duty to do so Rather the statutory language the legislative history and Board and Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Act all mandate the conclusion that an employer is not required to bargain with a union seeking to bargain as a minority representative for its members 66 That assertion was challenged by the rulemaking petition of the Steelworkers Union et al now pending before the NLRB 67 which noted that not one sentence in either the Advice Memorandum or the Regional Director s Dismissal Letter in the Dick s case presented any discussion of statutory language other than to reiterate the Morris reading without presenting any disagreement with that reading It noted further that the Memorandum never addressed the relevant legislative history particularly the smoking gun revelation Regarding the alleged Board and Supreme Court cases it pointed out that they are non existent for there are no cases holding that minority bargaining for members only where there is not yet a majority representative is either legal or illegal and the General Counsel was unable to cite any Unions appear determined to bring their case to the NLRB Because the General Counsel s refusal to issue a complaint is not deemed subject to review in order to bring the issue before the Board the United Steel Paper and Forestry Rubber Manufacturing Energy Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union AFL CIO Steelworkers Union joined by six other unions on August 14 2007 petitioned the NLRB in a substantive rulemaking case for issuance of the following rule Pursuant to Sections 7 8 a 1 and 8 a 5 of the Act in workplaces where employees are not currently represented by a certified or recognized Section 9 a majority exclusive collective bargaining representative in an appropriate bargaining unit the employer upon request has a duty to bargain collectively with a labor organization that represents less than an employee majority with regard to the employees who are its members but not for any other employees 68 The six unions that joined with the Steelworkers Union were the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Communication Workers of America United Automobile Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers California Nurses Association and United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America 68 Following the filing of that petition on August 14 2007 25 university professors of labor law submitted a letter to the NLRB indicating their agreement with the legal premise of the Steelworkers petition and urged the Board to issue the rule proposed in that petition 68 On January 4 2008 the Change to Win union federation on behalf of its seven affiliated unions to wit International Brotherhood of Teamsters Laborers International Union of North America Service Employees International Union United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America United Farm Workers United Food and Commercial Workers International Union and UNITE HERE 68 filed another rulemaking petition requesting the NLRB to issue the above proposed rule The proposed rule is thus now backed by several major AFL CIO unions one independent union and all of the CTW unions with their six million members These petitioning unions represent the overwhelming majority of all private sector union members in the United States who are subject to the NLRA nbsp The NRA Blue EagleTitle editThe title of the book refers to the symbol adopted by the National Recovery Administration The National Industrial Recovery Act was enacted by Congress in 1933 to stimulate the American economy and help the nation recover from the Great Depression The law created the NRA to administer the act Section 7 a of the Act promoted the formation of labor unions and created a tremendous upsurge of union organizing The NRA adopted the Blue Eagle icon as its symbol Notes edit Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 26 31 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 36 40 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 48 52 National Lock Co 1 NLB Part 2 15 1934 Bee Line Bus Co 1 NLB Part 2 24 1934 Eagle Rubber Co 1 NLB Part 2 31 1934 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 62 63 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 81 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 87 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 88 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 88 emphasis in original Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 94 97 Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 97 98 The concept is one advocated by the AFL CIO as well during a series of rallies on Human Rights Day in December 2005 See Rodriguez Union Supporters Picket White House Associated Press December 9 2005 Greenhouse Labor to Press for Workers Right to Join Unions New York Times December 9 2005 Labor Group to Celebrate World Human Rights Day Huntington Herald Dispatch December 10 2005 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 159 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 162 Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 173 181 Castillo Workers at Labor Forum Recount Tales of Abuse by Their Employers Austin American Statesman October 19 2005 Gaffney American Laws Violate Workers Rights Detroit News December 16 2005 Knowles Report Says Deck Stacked Against Union Organization Chicago Sun Times December 7 2005 Landrum American Rights at Work to Investigate Abuses at Workplace Associated Press October 14 2005 Lester AFL CIO Leaders Recruit Groups to Get Out Word About Workers Plight Associated Press October 25 2005 Discharges are a mandatory subject of bargaining under the NLRA See Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 181 182 Latham Legislative Purpose and Administrative Policy under the National Labor Relations Act George Washington Law Review 1936 pp 433 453 amp 456 n 65 Schatzki Majority Rule Exclusive Representation and the Interests of Individual Workers Should Exclusivity Be Abolished University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1975 Morris A Blueprint for Reform of the National Labor Relations Act Administrative Law Journal of the American University 1994 pp 517 554 555 Summers Unions Without Majority A Black Hole Chicago Kent Law Review 1990 Carlson The Origin and Future of Exclusive Representation in American Labor Law Duquesne Law Review 1992 Hyde et al After Smyrna Rights and Powers of Unions That Represent Less Than A Majority Rutgers Law Review 1993 Finkin The Road Not Taken Some Thoughts On Nonmajority Employee Representation Chicago Kent Law Review 1993 Estlund Rebuilding the Law of the Workplace In An Era of Self Regulation Columbia Law Review 2005 Schur The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace review Labor Studies Journal Spring 2006 Block Book Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Journal of Industrial Relations Autumn 2005 Freeman The Blue Eagle as Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace WorkingUSA September 2005 Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Labor History 2005 p 531 True Review Essay The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2005 p 181 Slater Do Unions Representing A Minority Of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 383 Herbst Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace LRA Online Labor Research Association 6 10 05 Budd Book Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace British Journal of Industrial Relations June 2007 p 326 Gerin Lajoie The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Relations Industrielles Industrial Relations 2005 p 823 Lardizabal Minority Union Members Only Collective Bargaining Hawaii Laborer Dec 2005 p 6 Zipser The Newspaper Guild Two Reviews Blue Eagle and Troublemakers ILCA Online Feb 15 2005 Cohen Minority Union Bargaining The Blue Eagle at Work a Book Review Portside Jan 8 2005 Newman A Union in Every Workplace Progressive Populist June 15 2005 Beer Book Review Time to Re examine an Old Method of Organizing Workday Minnesota Sept 17 2005 Katz Analysis Unions Turn to Blue Eagle Organizing Tool Workday Minnesota Sept 17 2005 Budd Book Review An Answer to Labor s Prayers Workday Minnesota Sept 19 2005 Benson The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Religious Socialism Vol 29 No 4 2005 Parker The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace All Aboard NLRB June 2005 p 11 Hyde Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Labour Le Travail Spring 2006 p 230 The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Noteworthy Books in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics Princeton University July 2006 Benson The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Benson s Union Democracy Blog Nov 2 2005 O Brien When Union Members in a Members Only Non Majority Union MONMU Want Weingarten Rights How High Will the Blue Eagle Fly University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business and Employment Law 2008 p 599 Estlund Cynthia L 2006 The Death of Labor Law Annual Review of Law and Social Science 2 105 123 doi 10 1146 annurev lawsocsci 2 081805 110015 S2CID 154534298 Budd Book Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace British Journal of Industrial Relations June 2007 p 328 True Review Essay The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Professor Charles J Morris Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2005 p 189 Workplace Prof Blog True Review Essay The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2005 pp 184 amp 190 Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 69 amp 101 Tomlins The State and the Unions Labor Relations Law and the Organized Labor Movement in America 1880 1960 1985 Slater Do Unions Representing A Minority Of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review Of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 390 Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 pp 250 note 89 and 350 notes 139 amp 141 Hyde Reviews Comptes Rendus Charles J Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Labour Le Travail Spring 2006 p 230 Chevron U S A Inc v Natural Resources Defense Council Inc 467 U S 837 842 43 1984 In re England Secretary of the Navy 375 F 3d 1159 1179 D C Cir 2004 Consumers Electronics Ass n v Federal Communications Commission 347 F 3d 291 298 D C Cir 2003 True Review Essay The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Professor Charles J Morris Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2005 p 195 footnotes omitted Morris Review Essay Minority Union Collective Bargaining A Commentary on John True s Review Essay on The Blue Eagle at Work and a Reply to Skeptics Regarding Members Only Bargaining Under the NLRA Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2006 pp 179 183 186 Slater Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 396 397 Slater Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 399 quoting Morris The Blue Eagle At Work p 151 Slater Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 399 quoting Morris The Blue Eagle At Work p 146 Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace 2005 p 146 Slater Do Unions Representing a Minority of Employees Have the Right to Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 2005 p 403 Rosenfeld Review Essay Worker Centers Emerging Labor Organizations Until They Confront the National Labor Relations Act Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2006 p 506 Dick s Sporting Goods Advice Memorandum Case 6 CA 34821 June 22 2006 p 11 A legal memorandum giving guidance on a specific case almost always involving a difficult or novel issue of law in response to a query from the Regional Director whether to a find merit to a charge and issue a complaint in the case or b find the charge lacks merit and dismiss it When the General Counsel instructs a Regional Director to find merit and issue a complaint the legal analysis set forth in the Advice Memorandum becomes the theory on which the General Counsel litigates the case and the Memorandum is not public information until the case concludes When the General Counsel instructs a Regional Director to find a charge lacks merit and dismiss it dismissal will be based on the legal analysis in the Memorandum and the Memorandum will be publicly available shortly thereafter Since the General Counsel investigates charges and presents those that it judges possess merit to the five member Board or its Administrative Law Judges for adjudication an Advice Memorandum does not reflect the views of the Board but indicates the types of issues the General Counsel is likely to present to the Board Dick s Sporting Goods Advice Memorandum Case 6 CA 34821 June 22 2006 Meisburg Memorandum GC 07 02 Report on Case Developments April through August 2006 December 15 2006 Greenhouse Seven Unions Ask Labor Board to Order Employers to Bargain New York Times August 15 2007 Let Workers Decide Spartanburg Herald Journal August 27 2007 a b c d Change to Win Joins Other Unions Seeking Rule on Minority Union Bargaining Daily Labor Report BNA Jan 8 2008 References editBlock Richard Book Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Journal of Industrial Relations 47 4 Autumn 2005 Budd John W Book Review The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace British Journal of Industrial Relations June 2007 Carlson Richard R The Origin and Future of Exclusive Representation In American Labor Law Duquesne Law Review 30 779 1992 Castillo Juan Workers at Labor Forum Recount Tales of Abuse by Their Employers Austin American Statesman October 19 2005 Dannin Ellen Taking Back the Workers Law Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 2006 ISBN 0 8014 4438 1 Dick s Sporting Goods Advice Memorandum Case 6 CA 34821 Office of the General Counsel National Labor Relations Board June 22 2006 Accessed August 16 2007 Estlund Cynthia L The Death of Labor Law Annual Review of Law and Social Science 2 December 2006 Estlund Cynthia L Rebuilding the Law of the Workplace In An Era of Self Regulation Columbia Law Review 105 319 2005 Finkin Matthew The Road Not Taken Some Thoughts On Nonmajority Employee Representation Chicago Kent Law Review 69 195 1993 Freeman Harris The Blue Eagle as Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace WorkingUSA 8 5 September 2005 Gaffney Mark American Laws Violate Workers Rights Detroit News December 16 2005 Greenhouse Steven Labor to Press for Workers Right to Join Unions New York Times December 9 2005 Greenhouse Steven Seven Unions Ask Labor Board to Order Employers to Bargain New York Times August 15 2007 Gross James A The Making of the National Labor Relations Board A Study in Economics Politics and the Law 1933 37 Reprint ed Albany N Y State University of New York Press 1981 ISBN 0 87395 270 7 Hyde Alan Reviews Comptes Rendus Charles J Morris The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Labour Le Travail Spring 2006 Hyde Alan et al After Smyrna Rights and Powers of Unions That Represent Less Than A Majority Rutgers Law Review 45 637 1993 Knowles Francine Report Says Deck Stacked Against Union Organization Chicago Sun Times December 7 2005 Labor Group to Celebrate World Human Rights Day Huntington Herald Dispatch December 10 2005 Landrum Jr Jonathan American Rights at Work to Investigate Abuses at Workplace Associated Press October 14 2005 Latham E G Legislative Purpose and Administrative Policy under the National Labor Relations Act George Washington Law Review 1936 Lester Will AFL CIO Leaders Recruit Groups to Get Out Word About Workers Plight Associated Press October 25 2005 Let Workers Decide Spartanburg Herald Journal August 27 2007 Meisburg Ronald Memorandum GC 07 02 Report on Case Developments April through August 2006 Office of the General Counsel National Labor Relations Board December 15 2006 Accessed August 16 2007 Morris Charles The Blue Eagle At Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 2005 ISBN 0 8014 4317 2 Morris Charles A Blueprint for Reform of the National Labor Relations Act Administrative Law Journal of the American University 1994 Morris Charles Review Essay Minority Union Collective Bargaining A Commentary on John True s Review Essay on The Blue Eagle at Work and a Reply to Skeptics Regarding Members Only Bargaining Under the NLRA Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 2006 Rodriguez Juan Carlos Union Supporters Picket White House Associated Press December 9 2005 Rosenfeld David Review Essay Worker Centers Emerging Labor Organizations Until They Confront the National Labor Relations Act Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 27 469 2006 Schatzki George Majority Rule Exclusive Representation and the Interests of Individual Workers Should Exclusivity Be Abolished University of Pennsylvania Law Review 123 897 1975 Schur Lisa The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace review Labor Studies Journal 31 1 Spring 2006 Slater Joseph E Do Unions Representing A Minority of Employees Have The Right To Bargain Collectively A Review of Charles Morris The Blue Eagle At Work Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 9 383 2005 Summers Clyde Unions Without Majority A Black Hole Chicago Kent Law Review 66 531 1990 Tomlins Christopher L The State and the Unions Labor Relations Law and the Organized Labor Movement in America 1880 1960 New York Cambridge University Press 1985 ISBN 0 521 31452 6 True John M Review Essay The Blue Eagle at Work Reclaiming Democratic Rights in the American Workplace Professor Charles J Morris Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 26 181 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Blue Eagle at Work amp oldid 1177643760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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