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Weingarten rights |
Conservatives | In
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Grievance Roster
Weingarten Rights
To Help Protect Yourself And Others
Weingarten Act
**
Employee's Right to Union Representation **
Any employee in the
bargaining unit has the right to be represented in closed door
meetings with management officials. The presence of the union
representative prevents supervisors from coercing employees into
confessing to alleged wrongdoings and/or accepting undue or harsh
remedial actions. The right of an employee to have a union
representative present during such questioning comes from a Supreme
Court Case decided in 1975. That case, NLRB vs. Weingarten, set out
certain rules for employees subject to investigatory interviews on
the job. The Weingarten Rule applies to federal and D.C. employees
and was adopted in the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978.
Under the Weingarten, an employee has the right to union
representation when:
a.
he/she is subject to an investigatory interview. Investigatory
interviews happen when a supervisor or other management official
questions an employee to obtain information which could be used as a
basis for discipline or asks an employee to defend her or his
conduct. And;
b.
he/she has a reasonable belief that discipline or other adverse
consequences may result from what he/she says in the interview.
When those conditions are met, the employee has the right to request
union representation.
Weingarten
Rules at a glance...
Rule 1:
There must be
an investigatory interview. The employee must, either before or
during the interview, ask for union representation.
Rule 2:
When the
request is made:
(a) the supervisor
MUST either grant the request and delay questioning until a union
representative arrives and has a chance to consult privately with
the employee; or
(b) deny the request
and end the interview immediately; or
(c) give the employee
a choice of :
· having
the interview without union representation or
· ending
the interview.
Rule 3:
If the supervisor
refuses to honor the employee's request and insists on the
interview, he or she commits an unfair labor practice (ULP)
and the
results of the interview may be set aside by the Federal Labor
Relations Authority if the charge is upheld. |