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formal comments to the Board's proposed rule. - SEIU

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well-known long before election petitions are filed.<br />

Medical Center is illustrative:<br />

69 The testimony of Veronica Tench at St. Vincent<br />

As with many representation elections, our employer learned about our campaign long<br />

before we filed a representation petition. Hospital managers carefully tracked union<br />

activity. The direc<strong>to</strong>r of human resources asked supervisors and managers <strong>to</strong> let her<br />

know of any Union activity, such as leafleting, home visits, or talking with interested<br />

workers in <strong>the</strong> cafeteria. Supervisors began meeting frequently with employees <strong>to</strong><br />

advocate against a union. Word got around that <strong>the</strong> hospital <strong>to</strong>ld some workers <strong>the</strong>y’d<br />

have <strong>to</strong> pay more for parking if <strong>the</strong>y joined <strong>the</strong> union. A department manager <strong>to</strong>ld<br />

employees that <strong>the</strong> Union only wanted money from <strong>the</strong>m. Even at this early stage, I<br />

don’t think <strong>the</strong>re were any employees who were unaware of St. Vincent’s arguments<br />

about <strong>the</strong> union. We tried <strong>to</strong> move forward, but hospital management s<strong>to</strong>pped us from<br />

every angle.<br />

7°<br />

Unfortunately, employers do not limit <strong>the</strong>mselves <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> many legal anti-union tactics at <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

disposal. Research confirms that it is typical for employers <strong>to</strong> begin committing unfair labor practices<br />

long before an election petition has even been filed. Indeed, about half of all serious unfair labor<br />

practices occur before <strong>the</strong> petition is filed.<br />

surveillance and harassment are especially concentrated in <strong>the</strong> weeks before <strong>the</strong> petition is filed,”<br />

7’ Studies of ULPs have found that “interrogation,<br />

suggesting that employers quickly learn of union activity in <strong>the</strong>se campaigns.<br />

Trisha Miechur, discussed supra at Part I.C, confirms that employers are well aware of union activity—<br />

and aggressively move <strong>to</strong> kill any campaign—long before any petition is filed.<br />

72 The experience of<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r illustrative example of an employer’s pre-petition misconduct occurred in late 2002 at<br />

Hillside Acres in Willard, Ohio, where workers at a nursing home attempted <strong>to</strong> organize with <strong>the</strong> United<br />

Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW). Over two months before <strong>the</strong> petition was filed, Hillside<br />

initiated its anti-union campaign at <strong>the</strong> first sign of union activity by disparately enforcing its solicitation<br />

policy and making an example of one of <strong>the</strong> union activists.<br />

73 Throughout <strong>the</strong> next two weeks—and still<br />

over one month before <strong>the</strong> petition was filed—<strong>the</strong> employer campaign expanded <strong>to</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r employees,<br />

69 There are also many “third-party organizations [such as <strong>the</strong> National Right <strong>to</strong> Work Committee and <strong>the</strong> Center for Union<br />

Facts] whose raison d’être is providing employees with information about and arguments against unionization.” Sachs,<br />

Enabling Employee Choice, supra note 19, at 708.<br />

° Written Testimony of Veronica Tench, NLRB Public Hearing (July 18, 2011), at 1-2.<br />

71 Bronfenbrenner and Warren, supra note 7, at 4. Both 47% of ULP charges and 47% of all “serious allegations won<br />

through Board or Court decisions or settlements” occurred before <strong>the</strong> petition was filed.” Id.<br />

72 Bronfenbrenner and Warren, supra note 7, at 7 (emphasis added).<br />

Hillside Acres Inc. d/b/a Liberty Hillside of Willard Inc. and United Food and Commercial Workers Union, local 911,<br />

AFL-CIO, CA-34217,-8CA-34331, 8-CA-34332; Confidential settlement agreements for discharged and disciplined<br />

employees.<br />

16

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