The U.S. Supreme Court will review Starbucks’s appeal against a lower court’s order to rehire labor activists in Memphis, Tennessee. The activists were dismissed following their disclosure of a union organizing drive to local media.
For years, the coffee chain has been battling an organized labor movement that has been trying to unionize baristas across the United States.
In this case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit upheld a federal district judge’s temporary order directing the company to reinstate a group of employees known in organizing circles as the Memphis Seven.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), an independent federal agency that aims to protect the rights of private-sector employees to join together to improve their wages and workplace conditions, said that Starbucks blocked lawful organizing activities by the baristas.
The union had complained to the board and filed unfair labor practice charges, alleging that Starbucks interfered with the workers’ right to form a union, and discriminated against union members.
The board secured a preliminary injunction that compelled the company to temporarily rehire the fired employees.
The decision to grant the petition for certiorari, or review, in Starbucks Corp. v. McKinney, came on Jan. 12 in an unsigned order. No justices dissented. The court didn’t explain its decision. A minimum of four of the nine Supreme Court justices have to vote to grant a petition for it to move forward to the oral argument stage.
The respondent is M. Kathleen McKinney, regional director for Region 15 of the NLRB, who’s being sued in her official capacity.
Under the National Labor Relations Act, the NLRB hears complaints about employers engaged in unfair labor practices. Section 10(j) grants the NLRB the power to seek ‘appropriate temporary relief or a restraining order’ while its adjudication process is ongoing. It also empowers federal district courts to issue “such temporary relief or restraining order as they deem just and proper.”
The NLRB seeks court orders when delays in deciding unfair labor practice cases might undermine the effectiveness of the final ruling or to protect the status quo at a workplace during the case’s administrative process. Once the NLRB makes its decision in the case, these temporary injunctions are lifted, according to a Bloomberg Law summary.
The Supreme Court may resolve a disagreement among federal courts of appeal over the legal test relied on in assessing NLRB applications for temporary injunctions against employers accused of running afoul of federal labor law.
‘Ideal Vehicle’
In its petition, Starbucks argues that the case is “the ideal vehicle for resolving an entrenched, frequently recurring, and squarely presented circuit split over what standard the National Labor Relations Board … must satisfy for federal courts to preliminarily enjoin alleged unfair labor practices during the pendency of Board administrative proceedings.
“That split carries enormous consequences for employers nationwide and unacceptably threatens the uniformity of federal labor law.”
The 4th, 7th, 8th, and 9th Circuits require the NLRB to use the traditional test under which preliminary injunctions are treated as “an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief.”
However, the 3rd, 5th, 6th, 10th, and 11th Circuits impose a looser “reasonable cause” test that’s “no real obstacle” to securing injunctions, the petition states.
The NLRB only has to demonstrate “reasonable cause” to believe that employers participated in unfair labor practices, which means the board’s “burden” is “relatively insubstantial,” Starbucks argues. “As the NLRB’s internal manual on section 10(j) injunctions puts it: The ‘threshold of proof … is low.’”
U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote in a brief that the federal district court determined that Starbucks fired “more than 80 percent of the union organizing committee at the Memphis store” and “discouraged and eroded support for a nascent unionization movement.”
This article by Matthew Vadum appeared Jan. 15, 2024, in The Epoch Times.