NLRB Proposes Significant Overhaul of Rules Governing Union Campaigns


June 21, 2011, the NLRB proposed a significant overhaul to its existing rules governing union representation elections. If implemented, the rules would impact employers by giving them less time to campaign and by giving unions significantly more information about employees, including personal telephone numbers and e-mail addresses. The changes also would limit challenges and postpone the resolution of disputes regarding who can vote. All of these changes will impact how employers run campaigns and how unions organize employees. The NLRB will expedite consideration of the new rules and accept comments only for the next 60 days. The NLRB is expected to issue final rules later this year.

Dissenting from today’s announced rulemaking, NLRB Member Hayes, a Republican, described the proposal as an attempt “by administrative fiat” to “impose organized labor’s much sought-after ‘quickie election’ option, a procedure under which elections will be held in 10 to 21 days from the filing of the petition.” He also criticized the changes to hearing procedures as focused on preventing parties, “primarily employers, from litigating issues in representation proceedings, even when legitimate issues are raised and a full record and Board review would seem to be essential.”

Some of the more significant proposed changes include:

Employers Must Provide the NLRB and Unions More Information about Voters:

Employers Will Have to Identify Issues Before Hearings or Risk Waiving Them:

Employers Will No Longer Be Entitled to a Hearing to Determine Who Votes:

Shortened Times for Pre-election and Post-election Hearings:

On their face, the proposed amendments do not shorten the Board’s internal practice of trying to schedule stipulated elections within 42-days from the petition filing. But by shortening the time targets at each step, the Board appears to be moving toward shortening the overall time between the filing of a petition and an election as well.  Certainly Member Hayes reads the proposed changes this way. Keep in mind that the 42-day target is not codified in the existing rules. It is an informal rule that can be modified without further rulemaking after the underlying procedures are changed.

At bottom, the shifting election landscape will require employers to react faster to election petitions and do more to prepare for (and hopefully prevent) election petitions before they are filed.


© 2025 Vedder Price
National Law Review, Volume I, Number 173