Labor News & Commentary October 27, 2023 issued its final rule for determining joint-employer status
https://onlabor.org/october-27-2023/
By Greg Volynsky
Greg Volynsky is a student at Harvard Law School.
In Todays News & Commentary, the NLRB yesterday issued its final rule for determining joint-employer status. The rule is the latest in a long saga.
In 1944, the Supreme Court decided in NLRB v. Hearst Publications that the NLRA includes independent contractors. Three years later, Congress adopted the Taft-Hartley Act, which excluded independent contractors from the definition of employees under the NLRA. The question remained, however, how to distinguish between independent contractors and employees.
In Boire v. The Greyhound Corporation (1964), the Supreme Court stated that determining whether employers possess[] sufficient control over the work of the employees to constitute joint employers was a factual inquiry for the Board. The following year, the Board held that joint employers share, or codetermine, those matters governing essential terms and conditions of employment. The Third Circuit adopted similar language in 1982.
For the subsequent three decades, the NLRB narrowed the criteria for joint-employer status. The Board assessed whether employers meaningfully affect[]employment terms and conditions, while setting aside unexercised authority to impact employment. Additionally, the control exerted needed to be direct and not merely limited and routine.
FULL story at link above.