| An
employee's right to representation
WEINGARTEN
RIGHTS
An
employee may be represented by the union
at an investigatory interview with his or
her supervisor when the employee reasonably
believes that the interview may lead to
a disciplinary action.
U.S.
Supreme Court ruling:
The
rights of employees to the presence of union
representatives during investigatory interviews
was announced by the U.S. Supreme Court
in 1975 in NLRB v. J. Weingarten, Inc.
Since that case involved a clerk being investigated
by the Weingarten Company, these rights
have become known as Weingarten Rights.
What
is an investigatory interview?
Employees
have Weingarten rights only during investigatory
interviews. An investigatory interview occurs
when a supervisor questions an employee
to obtain information which could be used
as a basis for discipline or asks an employee
to defend his or her conduct. If an employee
has a reasonable belief that discipline
or other adverse consequences may result
from what he or she says, the employee has
a right to request union representation.
Investigatory interviews usually relate
to subjects such as:
absenteeism
drinking fighting poor
attitude violation of safety
rules accidents drugs |
insubordination
sabotage work performance
damage to company property
falsification of records |
lateness
theft violation of work
procedures |
Weingarten
rules:
Under
the Supreme Court's Weingarten decision,
when an investigatory interview occurs,
the following rules apply:
RULE
1
The
employee must make a clear request for union
representation before or during the interview.
The employee cannot be punished for making
this request.
RULE
2
After
the employee makes the request, the employer
must choose from among three options. The
employer must:
- Grant
the request and delay questioning until
the union representative arrives and
has a chance to consult privately with
the employee; or
- Deny
the request and end the interview immediately;
or
- Give
the employee a choice of: (1) having
the interview without representation
or (2) ending the interview.
RULE
3
If
the supervisor denies the request for union
representation and continues to ask questions,
he or she commits an unfair labor practice
and the employee has the right to refuse
to answer. The supervisor cannot discipline
the employee for such a refusal.
Rights
of Stewards
Supervisors
often assert that the only role of a steward
at an investigatory interview is to observe
the discussion, i.e., to be a silent witness.
The Supreme Court, however, clearly acknowledged
a steward's right to assist and counsel
workers during the interview. Decided cases
establish the following procedures:
- When
the steward arrives, the supervisor
must inform the steward of the subject
matter of the interview; i.e., the type
of conduct for which discipline is being
considered (theft, lateness, drugs,
etc.).
- The
steward must be allowed to take the
worker aside for a private pre-interview
conference before questioning begins.
- The
steward must be allowed to speak during
the interview. The steward, however,
does not have the right to bargain over
the purpose of the interview.
- The
steward can request that the supervisor
clarify a question so the worker can
understand what is being asked.
- After
a question is asked, the steward can
give advice on how to answer.
- When
the questioning ends, the steward can
provide information to the supervisor.
It
must be emphasized that if the Weingarten
rights are complied with, stewards have
no right to tell workers not to answer questions
or to give false answers.
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