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Recently, an administrative law judge (ALJ) ruled that Amazon CEO Andy Jassey’s answers to interview questions violated the National Labor Relations Act.
Unless the ALJ's decision regarding Jassey's seemingly innocuous statements made during various interviews in 2022 (included in this episode) is overturned, which is unlikely to happen soon, all employers' speech during union-organizing campaigns may be significantly impacted. [See the full ALJ decision here.]
In this joint episode of Labor Relations Radio and Labor Relations Institute’s Left of Boom show, LRI’s Phil Wilson and Peter List discuss the ALJ’s decision against Amazon, and its ramifications for all employers.
* NLRB ALJ Decision on Amazon CEO Comments
* NLRB’s Basic Guide to the National Labor Relations Act
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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With employee engagement the lowest it’s been in 11 years, Dr. Fiona Jamison, CEO of Spring International, joins Labor Relations Radio host Peter List to discuss the “seismic shift” in employee expectations that has occurred over the past several years and how employers can adapt.
Fiona’s company, Spring International, is a women-owned, full-service, custom research and consulting firm located in suburban Philadelphia, PA. Across all research (policy, customer, and employee) programs, Spring has helped large corporations using customized employee engagement surveys, onboarding surveys, diversity assessments, exit interviews, & leadership assessments, as well as conducted research in 88 countries and in 25 languages.
You can follow Fiona Jamison on LinkedIn here, or contact Spring International here.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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According to Gallup, employee engagement is at its lowest point in 11 years.
The term ‘Employee Engagement’ has been around since 1990. Since then, corporate America has spent millions (billions?) of dollars investing in the “engagement industry”—polls, seminars, consultants and training.
Why, then, is engagement still so low?
What Is Employee Engagement? “Employee engagement,” according to one definition, “is a concept in human resources that refers to the degree to which employees are invested in, motivated by and passionate about the work they do and the company for which they work.”
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, returning guest Patricia Garland—author of ‘33 Ways How Not to Screw Up HR’—joins host Peter List to explore possible reasons why employee engagement is low and why, perhaps, we’re asking the wrong questions.
Related:
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 61—'33 Ways Not To Screw Up HR' Author Patricia Garland
* Labor Relations Radio, E113—How Your Merit Pay Plan May Cause Union Problems, with Guest Patricia Garland
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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More than 20 years ago, Atlas Container was the cover story of an Inc. magazine article entitled, The Power of Listening (registration required).
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, host Peter List is joined by Paul Centenari, CEO of Atlas Container, a corrugated box manufacturer that practices Open Book Management (OBM).
In this episode, Paul shares his views on what makes OBM a successful way to manage a business, as well as some of the challenges.
Related: The Power of Listening—How does an old-line manufacturer in a stagnant industry manage to grow 25% a year for 10 years? By taking its employees seriously.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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David R. Osborne, Senior Fellow for Labor Policy with the Commonwealth Foundation, returns to Labor Relations Radio to discuss his new podcast, Disunion: The Government Union Report, government unions, as well as how unions are working around the Supreme Court’s 2018 Janus decision.
Read more about the Commonwealth Foundation here.
Listen to David’s podcast Disunion: Government Union Report:
* On Spotify
* On YouTube
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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When Nicole Solas, a stay-at-home mom, was enrolling her child into kindergarten, she asked a few too many questions about what was going to be taught to her child.
The lack of answers, ultimately, led to public-records requests, which then turned into a lawsuit by the teachers’ union.
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, Ms. Solas joins host Peter List to discuss what led to the lawsuit against her, and the three-year saga that she has endured.
In addition to being a stay-at-home mon, Ms. Solas is a non-practicing attorney and Senior Fellow at the Independent Women’s Forum. She has also appeared as a parent advocate on The Ingraham Angle, Tucker Carlson Tonight, Newsmax National Report, and National Review. Her favorite appearance was on the cover of the New York Post as a featured “domestic terrorist.” She is the 2021 winner of the Goldwater Institute Freedom Award for battling education bureaucrats.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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According to a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) press release, “during the first six months of Fiscal Year 2024 (October 1–March 31), union election petitions filed at NLRB field offices rose 35% over the same period in Fiscal Year 2023.”
In this episode, Labor Relations Institute’s Michael VanDervort joins host Peter List to discuss the union organizing trends, as well as some of the current labor relations topics of the day.
Related links:
* The LRI Labor Libraries
* LRI Newsletter
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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On this episode of Labor Relations Radio, Congressman Burgess Owens (R-UT) discusses his recently-introduced bill, the Start Applying Labor Transparency (SALT) Act, legislation aimed at exposing “salting,” a common union organizing tactic where individuals are paid by labor unions to infiltrate companies to unionize employers from within.
Although this nefarious tactic—which relies on deceiving employers and, more importantly, employees—has been around for a long time, in recent years, union “salting” has become more prevalent at companies like Starbucks, Amazon and numerous other companies.
In addition to the SALT Act, Rep. Owens discusses the foundation he began before entering Congress, the Second Chance 4 Youth.
Second Chance 4 Youth is a Utah-based non-profit program with the aim to end the cycle of generational incarceration and lower the rates of recidivism. Learn more here.
Related:
* Owens Leads Labor Union Transparency Bill
* About Second Chance 4 Youth
* Analysis: Workers United paid nearly $2.5 million to organizers, "salts" and activists at Starbucks
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 20—A Primer On How Union Salts and “Moles” Undermine Companies Like Amazon and Others
* Labor Relations Radio, E116—Labor Attorney Marc Furman and Dealing With Union Salts
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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By Peter List, Editor | April 6, 2024
Last week, Mike Elk, a pro-union writer, who owns a website called PayDay Report, did a hit piece on me entitled “Anti-UAW Union Buster Secretly Behind Hit Labor News Site.” Here is my response.
* Perhaps, we owe you an explanation...
* Union Watchdog: UAW Leaders Bask In Puerto Rico As Members Get Laid Off
* Congress Should Investigate UAW's Neutrality Agreement & Works Council Scam At VW
* After Volkswagen Loss, UAW Bosses Turn To Bovine Excrement Manufacturing
* The UAW At VW: A Desperate Old Dog Tries A Very Old (And Illegal) Trick
* A Lesson In U.S. Labor Law & How The UAW Is Lying Its Way Into The South With VW's Help
* Why Are VW's German Union Bosses Backtracking On Their Expansion Ultimatum Now?
* Anti-UAW Workers File NLRB Charges Over VW's Pro-Union Coercion
* Why Doesn't The UAW Want A Secret-Ballot Election At VW?
* Anti-UAW Workers File NLRB Charges Over VW's Pro-Union Coercion
* Deutschland Meets Detroit: UAW partners with German union to launch all-out invasion of Mercedes & VW plants in U.S.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Have you ever wondered why, on the topic of immigration, unions have gone from protectionism to tacitly supporting so-called “open borders?”
In the episode of Labor Relations Radio, Michael Watson, Research Director for the Capital Research Center shares what can be considered an ‘origin story’ on how unions went from favoring tighter restrictions on immigration to almost no restrictions at all today.
Check out Michael Watson’s work at the Capitol Research Center:
* The Turn at the Millennium: Why Big Labor Switched Sides on Immigration
* Big Labor’s Decline and Left Turn: Membership Decline
* Big Labor’s Decline and Left Turn: A Trade Unionist in the White House
* Big Labor’s Decline and Left Turn: Causes of the Long Decline
* Big Labor’s Decline and Left Turn: Labor’s Private-Sector Left
* Big Labor’s Decline and Left Turn: A New Power Rises
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Reputation Partners’ CEO Nick Kalm returns to Labor Relations Radio to discuss Chicago politics, our nation’s immigration challenges, as well as to share some political observations and prognostications regarding the 2024 national elections.
Related:
* The Chicago Teachers Union Wants to End Student Homelessness at the Bargaining Table
* Labor Relations Radio, E99—Do unions have an Anti-Israel problem? A conversation with Nick Kalm
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 45—Guests Nick Kalm and Haley Hartmann on Gen Z in the Workplace
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 9—Reputation Partners' CEO Nick Kalm On Attacks On Company Brands
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Thought leader and renowned labor attorney Michael Lotito, with Littler Mendelson’s Workplace Policy Institute, returns to Labor Relations Radio to break down the U.S. Supreme Court case involving the “Chevron Doctrine,” and how it may impact government agencies, as it pertains to labor and employee relations.
In particular, Mr. Lotito discusses the Supreme Court’s case as it may relate to the current independent contractor issue, as well as the NLRB’s joint-employer rule.
Related:
* On 'Chevron' Deference and a Path Forward
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 37—Thought Leader Michael Lotito on the Emma Coalition and the radical and transformational changes coming to America’s workforce
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 12—Guest: Michael J. Lotito, Labor Attorney and Nationally-Recognized Thought Leader on Workplace Policy
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Nearly one-third of the manufacturing workforce is over 55. — Michele Vincent
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, Michele Vincent, the host of The U.S. Manufacturing Workforce Podcast shares some of the alarming research she has gathered on the changing demographics of our workforce.
* Listen to Michele’s episode “What’s to come, 2024 Predictions” on Apple
* Listen to Michele’s episode “What’s to come, 2024 Predictions” on Spotify
To obtain the information Michelle shared, go here.
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 59—MADI Corp's Michele Vincent on Preparing for Strikes
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Note: Nothing in this episode of Labor Relations Radio should be construed as legal advice. If you are experiencing union activity, union salting, or other labor issues with potential legal risk, you should contact your labor attorney.
Labor Attorney Marc Furman, a Partner with the law firm Cohen Seglias has a unique way of advising his clients on how to deal with union “salts.”
While Marc’s clients span a broad range of industries throughout the United States, including manufacturing, hotel and hospitality, automotive, telecommunications, healthcare, food processing and distribution, and financial services, Marc particularly focuses on representing construction companies in matters involving unions and union organizing, picketing, and prevailing wage situations.
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, Marc shares some insights that listeners may find informative and helpful.
Note: Nothing in this episode of Labor Relations Radio should be construed as legal advice. If you are experiencing union activity, union salting, or other labor issues with potential legal risk, you should contact your labor attorney. Should you wish to contact Marc Furman, you can do so here.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Often, despite disagreeing with the political positions and spending, and without knowing there are alternatives, educators join traditional teachers union like the AFT and NEA due to insurance benefits.
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, host Peter List is joined by Noelani Kahapea, Senior Director of Policy and Advocacy for the Association of American Educators (AAE).
The AAE, according to its website, is the “largest national, non-union, professional educators' organization, advancing the profession by offering a modern approach to teacher representation and educational advocacy, as well as promoting professionalism, collaboration and excellence without a partisan agenda.”
Ms. Kahapea explains the benefits provided to AAE members at a fraction of the cost that are usually charged to traditional teachers unions, as well as a large distinction in how benefits are used.
To get more information about the Association of American Educators (AAE), go here.
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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Frank Ricci, a Labor Fellow at Yankee Institute, Retired Union President for New Haven (CT) Fire Fighters, and Battalion Chief, returns to Labor Relations Radio to discuss how teachers’ unions and their progressive counterparts are using the collective bargaining process to put costly social-justice programs into contracts under the nose of taxpayers.
In Boston, Ricci wrote recently, teachers’ union president Jessica Tang announced they secured “an unprecedented $50 million to commence bolstering the affordable housing that Boston students and families require.”
The Boston contract is being utilized as a template by the AFL-CIO to advance housing and ‘environmental justice,’ he notes.
Related:
* How The Teachers Unions Embed Socialism Into Their Contracts
* How Superintendents Deceive Taxpayers into Higher School Budgets
* Labor Relations Radio, E87—Guests Frank Ricci & Keith Williams on Marxist Union Salts
For all prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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This episode of Labor Relations Radio is intended for HR practitioners and business owners responsible for administering pay plans for employees.
Do you have a merit pay or pay-for-performance plan? Are you administering it properly? What about your managers?
In this episode of Labor Relations Radio, returning guest Patricia Garland, author of 33 Ways Not to Screw Up HR, joins host Peter List to discuss “Barbara”—a highly-rated employee who went from elation to anger when her employer gave her a merit increase as part of a poorly-managed merit pay plan.
Ms. Garland shares her views on what to do, as well as what not to do when administering a pay-for-performance or merit pay plan.
Related:
* Labor Relations Radio, Ep. 61—'33 Ways Not To Screw Up HR' Author Patricia Garland
Order ‘33 Ways Not To Screw Up HR’ on Amazon.
You can find prior episodes of Labor Relations Radio here.
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In this fourth episode in our four-part series on the War on Independent Contractors, Karen Anderson, founder of Freelancers Against AB5—a Facebook group of more than 18,000 Californians impacted by the state’s imposition of AB5 which contains the three-pronged ‘ABC Test’— returns to Labor Relations Radio, along with a panel of independent contractors who have been harmed by the law.
As proverbial ‘canaries in the coal mine,’ as the U.S. Department of Labor rolls out its 339-page final rule—which contains a vague six-factor test—on independent contractors, the panel consists of of freelance writers, musicians (including a concert cellist), a radio journalist, yoga instructor and independent film producer share their stories as a warning to the rest of America.
* Related: AB5 Personal Stories — An Alphabetical Archive of Professionals Harmed by AB5
To contact your representative in Congress, use this link at Congress.gov. and urge them to stop the War on Independent Contractors.
Listen to the entire Labor Relations Radio series on the War on Independent Contractors:
* Labor Relations Radio, E109—The War on Independent Contractors, Part I: Rep. Kevin Kiley
* Labor Relations Radio, E110—The War on Independent Contractors, Part II: Freelancer Kim Kavin & Attorney Wilson Freeman
* Labor Relations Radio, E111—The War on Independent Contractors, Part III: Economist Liya Palagashvili on the impact of California's AB5
* Explainer: Top 10 Facts About the War on Independent Contractors in the U.S.
To listen to all Labor Relations Radio episodes, go here.
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In this episode, Liya Palagashvili, an economist and Senior Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, returns to Labor Relations Radio to discuss the Mercatus Center’s new study on California’s War on Independent Contractors through AB5 and its ABC Test, and how the U.S. Department of Labor’s six-factor final rule may impact America’s workforce.
Be sure to subscribe to Liya Palagashvili’s Substack Labor Market Matters.
Related:
* Labor Market Matters: New Study on California AB5 and Implications for the Department of Labor’s Independent Contractor Rule
* Labor Market Matters: A Deep Dive into our Study on California's AB5
* Mercatus Center: Assessing the Impact of Worker Reclassification: Employment Outcomes Post–California AB5
* Labor Relations Radio, E109—The War on Independent Contractors, Part I: Rep. Kevin Kiley
* Labor Relations Radio, E110—The War on Independent Contractors, Part II: Freelancer Kim Kavin & Attorney Wilson Freeman
* Explainer: Top 10 Facts About the War on Independent Contractors in the U.S.
* To listen to all other episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
LaborUnionNews.com and Labor Relations Radio are subscriber-supported. To receive new posts and support our work, please consider becoming a paid subscriber.
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Following the U.S. Department of Labor’s releasing its final rule to limit the freedom of individuals to earn a living though independent contracting, the founders of Fight For Freelancers, a coalition of more than 2,500 freelancers in professions ranging from writing to truck driving, filed a lawsuit through the Pacific Legal Foundation.
In this second episode in our multi-part series on the War on Independent Contractors, Kim Kavin, one of the founders of Fight for Freelancers USA, returns to Labor Relations Radio, along with her attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation’s Wilson Freeman to discuss the lawsuit, as well as the War on Independent Contractors at the state and federal levels.
Related:
* Labor Relations Radio, E109—The War on Independent Contractors, Part I: Rep. Kevin Kiley
* Explainer: Top 10 Facts About the War on Independent Contractors in the U.S.
* Pacific Legal Foundation: Freelancers sue Department of Labor over vague, new contracting rule
* Follow Kim Kavin on X (formerly Twitter)
* To listen to all other episodes of Labor Relations Radio, go here.
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