Jackson Lewis LLP, on behalf of the Retail Litigation Center,
Inc., has filed with the National Labor Relations Board a
“friend-of-the-court” brief urging the Board to limit non-employee union
agents’ right to access store property to communicate to shoppers the
union’s disagreement with the way the retailer is operating. The brief
asks the NLRB to limit such access only to cases where the employer has
allowed like conduct by other individuals and groups, so that the union
has been singled out for adverse treatment.
The action came in a case involving Roundy’s, Inc., a supermarket
operator in Wisconsin and Minnesota. The retail chain had sought to
prevent a carpenters’ union from handbilling shoppers on store grounds
to protest the supermarket’s use of a non-union contractor to perform
renovations and asking the public not to shop at the store. The Board
had invited interested parties to submit briefs in the matter.
Almost two decades ago, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed a
retailer’s right to exclude unwanted intruders from its property,
subject only to certain limited exceptions. Jackson Lewis’ amicus curiae brief for the retail industry argues that the 2007 Board decision in Register-Guard presents the best way to analyze the "discrimination exception" raised in Roundy's.
The brief says the Board’s earlier decision enables retail employers to
control access to their property by non-employee union agents.
The Retail Litigation Center participates in selected federal and
state cases affecting issues of importance to the retail industry. The
Center provides the retail industry with an opportunity to be heard on
important legal questions and helps inform courts and administrative
agencies of the potential effects of their decisions on the industry.