NLRB refines position on employee social media and workplace criticism
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
NLRB refines position on employee social media and workplace criticism
My personal policy is to refrain from discussing work on social media. In all my years of Twitter-ing and Facebook-ing, I’ve posted only a very few work-related updates, invariably focused on interpersonal minutiae like elevator rudeness. I think it’s just best to leave work at work. However, as the Times's Steven Greenhouse reports, the National Labor Relations Board recently ruled that conversational exchanges about working conditions between multiple employees on social media may be construed as the kind of concerted activity protected by the National Labor Relations Act.
The Times story to which I link in this post’s headline mentions at least two instances (here and here1) where the termination of lone complainers was upheld by the NLRB. This ruling suggests that my personal policy is a safe bet: there’s no way to engage in concerted activity if you’re venting alone.
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I really like those fancy paragraph-specific links the Times has on its digital articles. ↩
#Links #Law #Link #New York Times #social media #employment law #National Labor Relations Act #National Labor Relations Board #NLRB #regulation #social media law #Steven Greenhouse