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You have the Right TO Union Representation

4/19/2017

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What to Do IF Management wants to discipline you

If you are a union member, you have a right to have union representation at any interview or meeting that could lead to disciplinary action against you. The Supreme Court case of National Labor Relations Board v. Weingarten, decided in 1975, established this basic entitlement and the procedures for when and how union reps may participate in interviews. Collectively, these rules are referred to as “Weingarten rights.”

Repeat these words...

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The  Weingarten Case
The actual lawsuit that led to the establishment of Weingarten rights involved an employee at a lunch counter. Laura Collins was accused of stealing and interviewed by the store manager and a loss prevention specialist. The company believed Collins had taken a large box of chicken but paid only for a small box. Collins said she took only four pieces of chicken – the amount customers receive in a small box – but had to put it in a large box because the store was out of small boxes. Her story checked out, and Collins was cleared.
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From these humble facts, Weingarten rights were born. During the interview, Collins asked several times for her union rep or shop steward, but the company wouldn’t grant her request. Although management asked Collins to keep the interview to herself, Collins told her shop steward about it and the union filed an unfair labor practice charge against the company. Ultimately, the Supreme Court decided that an employee is entitled to union representation for investigatory interviews.
When Weingarten Rights Apply
An employee who reasonably believes that an investigatory interview could lead to discipline is entitled to ask for union representation.   An investigatory interview is a meeting with management at which the employee will be questioned or asked to explain his or her conduct, and which could lead to disciplinary action against the employee.
The employer is not obligated to inform employees of their Weingarten rights or to ask whether an employee would like a union rep at a  meeting or interview. The employee must affirmatively request union representation.
The Employer's Options
​Once an employee requests representation, the employer may not proceed with the interview without the union representative. However, the employee need not conduct the interview at all: It may interview the employee with the union rep present, or refuse to allow the union rep and discontinue the interview, carrying on its investigation by other means.

Get the Weingarten APP

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If you want a quick reference to the Weingarten rights, guess what? There's an app for that.

Download the app, and never forget your rights.
For Android Phones : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.staleydigital.apps.android.weingarten
Weingartent Rights Infographic
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AFSCME Local 1072
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College Park, MD 20742 


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