Filing
📃 April 08, 2026 Representation Filings
7 Representation Case Filings, 1 Representation Management Case Filing, and 1 Unit Clarification
Filing
7 Representation Case Filings, 1 Representation Management Case Filing, and 1 Unit Clarification
Filing
34 Charges Against Employers and 6 Charges Against Labor Organizations
News
The NLRB ordered Google to bargain with the Alphabet Workers Union after ruling it unlawfully refused to recognize the union as a joint employer with staffing contractor Accenture Flex.
News
The NLRB ruled that a postal union violated its duty of fair representation by fabricating grievance records for a fired worker, and that the union's own deception paused the filing clock.
News
The NLRB's April 2026 denial of Browning-Ferris's reconsideration motion closes the book on a 13-year legal odyssey, but the joint employer question it ignited remains as unsettled as ever.
News
The U.S. Department of Labor recovered $122,476 in back wages for 140 workers at AirSouth LLC, a Mississippi HVAC company, after finding the employer failed to include bonuses in overtime calculations and withheld final paychecks from two employees.
News
The U.S. Department of Labor launched four voluntary self-assessment tools to help businesses identify forced labor risks in global supply chains and comply with federal import law.
Filing
7 Representation Case Filings, 1 NRLB Representation Decertification Filing, and 1 Representation Management Case Filing
Filing
23 Charges Against Employers and 7 Charges Against Labor Organizations
News
The NLRB found ILA Local 1694 violated federal labor law by systematically blocking a dissident worker from job referrals in retaliation for writing complaint letters to union leadership, ruling that walking away was entirely reasonable.
News
The NLRB ruled Prime Communications' severance agreements unlawfully silenced former employees, reaffirming federal protections against overbroad nondisparagement and confidentiality clauses in the workplace.
News
The NLRB found ILA Local 1526 violated federal labor law by failing to fairly represent a member's seniority claim and threatening workers who filed charges or testified against the union.