District 13
ORGANIZING
Director
John M. (Mickey) Breaux
District Staff
Offices and Numbers
News
Press Releases
News Articles
Education
Introduction
Educational Materials Available
Course and Training Descriptions
District 13 Training Questionnaire
Organizing
Welcome to the District 13 Organizing Web Site
Organizers for District 13
Why Should I Join A Union?
Frequently Asked Questions and Answers About Forming a Union
Contact an Organizer in District 13
Summary of the National Labor Relations Act
The Rights of Employees
Rapid Response In Our District
Annual Fish Fry For Local 752L Fires Up Members
Local Union Leaders Meet with U.S. Congressman on Trade Issue
Women of Steel
Women of Steel Coordinator For District 13
Women of Steel Leadership Development Takes Off in District 13
District Events
District 13 Council July Meeting
Who Needs Unions? Texas High School Students Find Out Why They Do
2008 MidSouth Union Institute
District 13's Women Of Steel Test Toys for Women's Shelter
Texas Locals Learning to Build Power
There’s a new flag flying over Texas City Chemicals
Louisiana Congressional Candidate visits Plant in Zachary, La.
Houston Group Hosts "Safe Home Session"
District 13 Holds Training Workshop
Oklahoma AFL-CIO Held Its Convention in Tulsa on Oct. 10-12.
USW Local 13-447 Endorses Foster Campbell for La. Governor
Home Depot Leafleted in Texas in Support of Canadian Workers
First District 13 Conference Big Success!
Pictures from District Conference
District 13 PAC Raffle
Union Links
Local Union Web Sites
Downloadable Information
Material for Local Unions
District 13 Elected Officials



Summary of the National Labor Relations Act

Purpose of the Act.

 

It is in the national interest of the United States to maintain full production in its economy. Industrial strife among employees, employers, and labor organizations interferes with full production and is contrary to our national interest. Experience has shown that labor disputes can be lessened if the parties involved recognize the legitimate rights of each in their relations with one another. To establish these rights under law, Congress enacted the National Labor Relations Act. Its purpose is to define and protect the rights of employees and employers, to encourage collective bargaining, and to eliminate certain practices on the part of labor and management that are harmful to the general welfare.

 

What the Act Provides

 

The National Labor Relations Act states and defines the rights of employees to organize and to bargain collectively with their employers through representatives of their own choosing or not to do so. To ensure that employees can freely choose their own representatives for the purpose of collective bargaining, or choose not to be represented, the Act establishes a procedure by which they can exercise their choice at a secret-ballot election conducted by the National Labor Relations Board. Further, to protect the rights of employees and employers, and to prevent labor disputes that would adversely affect the rights of the public, Congress has defined certain practices of employers and unions as unfair labor practices.

 

How the Act is Enforced

The law is administered and enforced principally by the National Labor Relations Board and the General Counsel acting through 52 regional and other field offices located in major cities in various sections of the country. The General Counsel and the staff of the Regional Offices investigate and prosecute unfair labor practice cases and conduct elections to determine employee representatives. The five-member Board decides cases involving charges of unfair labor practices and determines representation election questions that come to it from the Regional Offices.

 

How this Material is Organized

 

The rights of employees, including the rights to self-organization and collective bargaining that are protected by Section 7 of the Act, are presented first in this guide. The Act’s provisions concerning the requirements for union-security agreements are covered in the same section, which also includes a discussion of the right to strike and the right to picket. The obligations of collective bargaining and the Act’s provisions for the selection of employee representatives are treated in the next section. Unfair labor practices of employers and of labor organizations are then presented in separate sections.

 

The final section, entitled “How the Act Is Enforced,” sets forth the organization of the NLRB; its authority and limitations; its procedures and powers in representation matters, in unfair labor practice cases, and in certain special proceedings under the Act; and the Act’s provisions concerning enforcement of the Board’s orders.