The most powerful weapon a labor union can unleash against an unwitting employer, whether unionized or not, is a strike. Strikes, however, can take different forms and arise under different circumstances. Last month, the National Labor Relations Boards (NLRB) Office of the General Counsel (GC), the prosecuting arm of the federal NLRB agency, issued a short but powerful memorandum regarding an increasingly common union tactic: intermittent and partial strikes. While the Board has generally held that such strikes are not protected under the National Labor Relations Act, the GC took issue with this established Board law and advocated for a change.


The memorandum included a model brief outlining the GCs position. The brief first sets forth a distinction between intermittent strikes which involve striking, returning to work, and striking again and partial strikes which involve a refusal to perform certain tasks while working. The brief then advocates for a change in the law to provide protection to employees engaged in such strikes if the following conditions are met:

 

(1) The strike involves a complete cessation of work and is not too brief or too frequent,

 

(2) The strike is designed to impose economic pressure on an employer, and not to impose new terms and conditions of employment, and

 

(3) The employees purpose for striking is made known to the employer. Notably, the GC stated that adopting this change would increase the rights of non-union workers to engage in protected strikes.

 

While employers may not fully appreciate the position for which the GC advocates, there is no denying that the issue is as relevant as ever. Nationally, the Fight for Fifteen amongst fast food and retail workers has spawned several one-day strikes that have severely disrupted operations and left employers and employees with unanswered questions about their rights during limited strikes. Locally, the Minnesota Nurses Association recently engaged in multiple strikes of varying duration during the same contract dispute with Allina Health System. If the legal changes advocated by the GC were in effect, the changes likely would have  altered the strategies implemented by both the unions and employers involved in these labor disputes.

 

While the GCs position is not yet Board law, employers should still take notice. Many of the GCs enforcement priorities in recent years have eventually been legitimized by the Board. Employers, both unionized and not, should be mindful of this new position advocated by the GC when responding to intermittent or partial strikes by their employees. If they discipline a worker engaging in this tactic, they may find themselves under investigation by the NLRB, and the target of the GCs most recent priority.