The Employee Free Choice Act

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The Employee Free Choice Act



The Employee Free Choice Act

The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) will help make our economy work for everyone again by giving workers the tools they need to bargain for fair wages, benefits, and treatment. The bill does this in three ways.

Gives Workers a Choice

The EFCA gives workers the choice of whether to form a union through majority sign-up or through the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) election process. Both processes already exist under current law, but employers currently hold the power to veto the decision of workers to form a union through majority sign-up. The Employee Free Choice Act would allow the NLRB to certify a union if a majority of employees in a workplace sign authorization cards designating the union as its bargaining representative. The NLRB would develop model authorization language and procedures for establishing the validity of signed authorizations. Under current law, employers often require workers who want to collectively bargain to go through one-sided, time-consuming elections as a condition of being certified as their bargaining representatives. Such elections become the focal point of employer efforts to frustrate the right of workers to organize. Coercion and pressure on workers are reduced in the majority sign-up process. • Guarantees First Union Contract

The EFCA guarantees a first union contract through mediation and arbitration. If an employer and a union are engaged in bargaining for their first contract and are unable to reach agreement within 90 days, either party may refer the dispute to the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) for mediation. If the FMCS has been unable to bring the parties to agreement after 30 days of mediation, the dispute will be referred to arbitration and the results of the arbitration shall be binding on the parties for two years. Time limits may be extended by mutual agreement of the parties. Under current law, employers have a duty to bargain in good faith, but are under no obligation to reach agreement. As a result, a recent study found that 34 percent of union election victories had not resulted in a first contract after two or three years of bargaining. If the union wins recognition, anti-union employers often simply carry their union-busting campaign into contract negotiations.

Strengthens Penalties

The EFCA strengthens penalties for violations against workers who are trying to organize or negotiate a first contract. It makes the following new provisions applicable to violations of the National Labor Relations Act committed by employers against employees during any period while employees are attempting to organize a union or negotiate a first contract with the employer: Mandatory Applications for Injunctions. Provides that, just as the NLRB is required to seek a Federal court injunction against a union whenever there is reasonable cause to believe that the union has violated the law, the NLRB could also seek a Federal court injunction against an employer whenever there is reasonable cause to believe that the employer has discharged or discriminated against employees, threatened to discharge or discriminate against employees, or engaged ...
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