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NLRB Announces New Standard for Off-Duty Onsite Contractors' Access to Property


The extent to which an employer’s property rights must yield to employee organizing, picketing, or handbilling activity has historically been a fertile source of litigation. The National Labor Relations Board added to this body of case law last week in Tobin Center for the Performing Arts. The Board’s decision limited the rights of onsite contractors’ employees to access the site while off-duty to engage in protected activity under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).

This case involved a group of San Antonio Symphony musicians who were prevented by the property owner from handbilling outside of the Tobin Center – the venue in which they sometimes performed. The handbills in question publicized the fact that the Ballet San Antonio had chosen to use recorded rather than live music for one of its shows. The San Antonio Symphony did not own the Tobin Center; rather, it had a license to use the facility for some of its performances. When the Tobin Center’s ownership told the musicians they could not handbill or solicit on its premises, they moved across the street and continued to publicize their dispute.

The musicians brought an NLRB charge against the Tobin Center alleging that it had violated their Section 7 rights by refusing to allow their handbilling on its property. The administrative law judge, applying extant law, agreed and held that the musicians, as employees of a contractor of the property owner, had the right to engage in protected activity on the property owner’s site since they “regularly” conducted business there and the property owner could not show that the protected activity would “significantly interfere” with the use of its property. The Board created this standard in New York New York Hotel & Casino, and reinforced it in subsequent cases.

The current Board, however, held that the New York New York standard gave short shrift to the property owner’s right to exclude non-employees from its premises. The New York New York standard essentially drew no distinction between employees of the property owner and non-employees of the property owner in determining their right to access the property to engage in protected activity. The Board explained that “[a]lthough contractor employees, unlike nonemployees, are not complete strangers to the property, their diminished contact with the owner and its property should reasonably correspond to lesser rights of access to the property when off duty than the property owner’s own employees enjoy.”

With its Tobin Center decision, The Board announced its new standard for balancing the rights of property owners to exclude non-employees from their property with the rights of contractor employees to engage in protected activity on the property on which they perform work. Such off-duty contractor employees “may access a property owner’s property to engage in Section 7 activity where they have a sufficient connection to the property owner by working regularly and exclusively on the property, and the contractor employees do not have access to reasonable alternative nontrespassory means of communicating their message.”

The Board added that such nontrespassory means “may include newspapers, radio, television, billboards, and other media through which is transmitted the ordinary flow of information that characterizes our society.” In the case at hand, however, the Board had no trouble finding that the musicians had an effective alternative means of communication, as they proceeded to go across the street and continue handbilling.

This new standard likely means that off-duty employees of an onsite contractor may be excluded from the work site by the property owner in most cases. Indeed, in today’s world of social media and other forms of easy publication, it seems that such contractor employees would have a number of effective alternatives to picketing or handbilling on the property owner’s property.

One caveat is in order, however. Notwithstanding the announcement of this new standard, property owners still must treat all picketing, handbilling, and solicitation by non-employees equally. If a property owner allows such activity by non-employees for some purposes, it must allow that activity by the off-duty onsite contractors for their protected activity, lest they be charged with discrimination under the NLRA.


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NLRB Gives Employers Win Against Non-Employee Union Organizers

June 17, 2019 | Labor and Employment, National Labor Relations Board

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