On May 21, the United States
Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that companies may continue to use
arbitration clauses in employment contracts which could affect approximately 25
million employment contracts. The case is the latest attempt by the court to
determine the extent to which employers are legally allowed to insist that workplace
disputes be resolved through individual arbitration rather than inside a court
room and prohibits workers from banding together to take legal action over employment
issues.
The decision is the result of a
trio of cases in which employees tried to bring class-action lawsuits over the
employers’ failure to pay legally-required overtime, but the employers argued
that standard hiring agreements, which the employees signed, require them to
take their individual cases to private arbitration. This makes it more
difficult for employees to pursue minor claims en masse, whether in class
actions or in mass arbitration. The legal dispute essential pits two
longstanding laws against each other; the 1925 Federal Arbitration Act which
protects the right to agree to divert court disputes to private arbitration and
the 1935 National Labor Relations Act which recognizes workers’ rights to form
unions and take other collective actions to improve workplace conditions.
In 2011 the Supreme Court rule in
AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion that the Federal Arbitration Act allowed
companies to avoid class action lawsuits by insisting on individual arbitration
in their contracts with consumers and barring consumers from banding together
with unhappy customers. In the most recent cases, workers argued that their
employment contracts differed from contracts between producers and consumers.
They claimed that the National Labor Relations Act prohibits class waivers and
protects workers’ rights to engage in “concerted activities.” Labor advocates
say a ruling against the employees would destroy the incentives lawyers have to
investigate and litigate broad-based legal violations in the workplace,
including claims of wage discrimination.
The close decision highlights the
staunch political differences between the Supreme Court Justices. Justice
Anthony Kennedy, who was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Ronald
Reagan in 1988, signaled support for individual arbitration stating that, “many
of the advantages of concerted action can be obtained by going to the same
attorney.” However, the Democrat-nominated Justices, opposed the employer’s
ability to ban group legal action by workers. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
Sonia Sotomayor warned that confidentiality provisions in certain employment
contracts bar workers from sharing information about their grievances.
Sources:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/21/business/supreme-court-upholds-workplace-arbitration-contracts.html
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