Today, in a split decision, the National Labor Relations Board promulgated a new test that will make it easier for employees to establish joint-employer status in labor contracting arrangements.   Under the "restated" legal standard for joint-employer status, the Board "may find that two or more entities are joint em­ployers of a single work force if they are both employers within the meaning of the common law, and if they share or codetermine those matters governing the essential terms and conditions of employment."  The Board went on to say that "in evaluating the allocation and exercise of control in the workplace, we will consider the various ways in which joint employers may "share" control over terms and conditions of em­ployment or "codetermine" them, as the Board and the courts have done in the past."

Under the Board's more liberal test, joint employer status will be found where the employers share or codetermine "those matters governing the essential terms and conditions of employment."  Such essential terms and conditions include hiring, firing, discipline, supervision, direction of work and hours, and the determination of wages.

The likely impact of this decision will be that companies believing they were insulated from union organizing campaigns and/or unfair labor practice charges aimed at their labor contractors could now be jointly on the hook.

The Decision Browning-Ferris Industries of California, Inc., d/b/a BFI Newby Island Recyclery, and FPR-II, LLC, d/b/a Leadpoint Business Services, and Sanitary Truck Drivers and Helpers Local 350, Interna­tional Brotherhood of Teamsters, Petitioner. Case 32–RC 109684 can be found at http://apps.nlrb.gov/link/document.aspx/09031d4581d99106

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