Update: The NLRB and Single Integrated Employers
In October, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) employed a little-used procedural doctrine to issue a consolidated complaint against a parent company of a chain of hospitals located throughout the U.S. The NLRB issued the consolidated complaint, which included 29 unfair labor practice charges, against Community Health Systems, Inc. and seven wholly-owned subsidiary hospitals located in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and California under the “single integrated employer” doctrine. The NLRB alleges that the hospital chain maintains rules that infringe on employees’ rights to discuss wages, hours and working conditions, that it retaliated against employees who participate in union activities, and that it failed to engage in good-faith collective bargaining with the union.Parent and subsidiary companies are typically viewed as separate entities under the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). There is longstanding legal precedence that parents and subsidiaries are not considered as a single employer for collective bargaining purposes. Dow Chemical, 326 NLRB 28 (1998). There have been occasions, however, when the NLRB has found that the particular relationship between the parent and subsidiary companies is so close as to constitute a single integrated enterprise or employer for purposes of determining joint liability for unfair labor practice charges or the imposition of a collective bargaining agreement negotiated by one entity on an affiliated entity.There are four factors that the Board analyzes to determine whether a parent and subsidiary should be classified as a single integrated employer:
- common ownership;
- common management;
- interrelationship of operations;
- centralized control over labor relations.
- when a parent company officer is the subsidiary vice president,
- when a parent company manager is responsible for daily operations at the subsidiary, and
- when all financial decisions for the subsidiary are made by the parent company.
- When the parent company sets the agenda for collective bargaining negotiations for the subsidiary company;
- When the parent company makes labor relations decisions for the subsidiary company, including telling the subsidiary company what information to share or not share with the union;
- When the parent company directs the subsidiary with respect to staffing levels;
- When the parent company makes the decision as to which individuals or job titles should be included in a reduction in force; and
- When the parent company decides when and how to negotiate with the union.
- if the companies share a website or logo;
- if the companies use the same business cards or trucks; or
- if employees between the two companies are shared or frequently exchanged.