A traditional remedy the NLRB has always ordered when it finds that an employer or a union violated the NLRA is the posting of a written notice. Usually, the remedial notice contains a brief recitation of employee rights under the law, a listing of the violations the NLRB found, an undertaking to cease and desist from that conduct, and a description of affirmative action to be taken to resolve the violations. The notice must be signed by a responsible official of the party found in violation of the law.
In the past, the NLRB ordered the remedial notice to be posted in all places where notices were customarily posted. In the case of an employer, this usually meant bulletin boards controlled by the employer, near time clocks, and similar locations. It was typically an extraordinary remedy for the notice to be disseminated any more broadly than this paper posting.
In J&R Flooring, Inc., 356 N.L.R.B. No. 9 (2010) (3-1), the NLRB recently altered this traditional approach. In a case involving violations of the NLRA by an employer, the NLRB ordered that the employer distribute the remedial notice electronically when that is the customary means of communicating with employees. (The same rule applies in the case of unions found to have violated the NLRA.) Member Hayes disagreed, and would have limited the posting to the traditional remedy.
The NLRB reasoned that employers are increasingly communicating with employees through electronic media. The NLRB also pointed to the growth in telecommuting and decentralization of workspaces that could cause an employee to never see a notice that is posted on a bulletin board. Finally, the NLRB reasoned that if an employer customarily uses its electronic systems to communicate with employees, then use of the same means to distribute a remedial notice would not impose an undue burden on employers.
For the labor relations professional, the J&R Flooring decision is significant for four reasons: