The National Labor Relations Board today adopted a new union-advocated standard that two separate entities are “joint employers” of the same employees if they have any degree of indirect or reserved control over those matters governing the essential terms and conditions of employment of the employees. The Board’s new standard would impose all duties and responsibilities under the National Labor Relations Act on both joint employers and enmesh separate businesses in bargaining relationships that only one of the employers actually controls. The AHA was one of 14 national associations that urged in a joint friend-of-the-court brief that the Board not change its long-established previous standards for joint-employer determination, under which two separate entities were joint employers only if they exerted direct and significant control over the same employees such that they “share or codetermine those matters governing the essential terms and conditions of employment.” Under the newly adopted standard, the Board will no longer require that a joint employer actually exercise the authority to control employees’ terms and conditions of employment; reserved authority – even if not exercised – will now be relevant to the joint-employment determination. The Board also will consider indirectly exercised control – such as through an intermediary – as establishing joint-employer status. The case is Browning-Ferris Industries of California and Sanitary Truck Drivers and Helpers Local 350, International Brotherhood of Teamsters.

Related News Articles

Headline
A replay of the Hospital Capacity Management Consortium’s Spring Symposium is now available. The event, for health care capacity management professionals,…
Headline
The AHA May 12 responded to the Office of Management and Budget's April 11 request for information on regulatory relief, making 100 suggestions to the Trump…
Headline
A blog by the AHA and Press Ganey shares insights from leaders of seven health care systems on balancing the demands of delivering personalized, high-quality…
Blog
Public
In today’s rapidly evolving health care landscape — where patient outcomes and safety are non-negotiable top priorities — health systems and their staff are…
Headline
A Q&A in the latest edition of AHA Trustee Insights highlights how boards value the perspective of nurses. Experts interviewed include Kimberly Cleveland,…
Headline
Claire Zangerle, DNP, R.N., chief executive officer of the American Organization for Nursing Leadership and senior vice president and chief nurse executive of…