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Testimony to Congress outlines employer anti-union efforts

ITHACA, N.Y. – Most employers continue to engage in coercive and retaliatory practices to limit union activity, a Cornell University researcher told the U.S. House of Representatives Labor Committee in testimony Sept. 14

Kate Bronfenbrenner, the ILR School’s director of labor education research, discussed preliminary findings from “Waiting to organize: Employer opposition in NLRB elections, 2016-2021,” an analysis of employer behavior in 286 National Labor Relations Board-monitored elections where workers vote for or against a union supervised by the National Labor Relations Board. 

Bronfenbrenner will present the paper, co-authored by ILR alumni Katy Habr and Victor Yengle, as well as master’s student Anders Rhodin, at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth conference on Sept. 19.  

According to the new data, where employers ran anti-union campaigns:

“The current NLRB is making a courageous effort to restrain the most egregious violators, but they have neither the funding nor the enforcement powers to curtail illegal behavior,” Bronfenbrenner said. 

In her testimony, she recommended the following labor law reforms:

This research is the latest in a series of studies Bronfenbrenner has conducted on employer opposition in private and public sector organizing since 1986, including “No Holds Barred – The Intensification of Employer Opposition to Organizing.”

Released in 2009, that study found that the majority of employers engaged in coercive and retaliatory practices such as threats of plant closure, interrogation, discharge, discipline, harassment, surveillance and alteration of benefits and conditions, and that employer opposition was intensifying over time.

Bronfenbrenner’s most recent employer opposition research was undertaken with the Worker Empowerment Research Network, which she co-directs. The work was funded by grants from WorkRise and Omidyar. 

For additional information, see this Cornell Chronicle story.

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