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United St Testing v. NLRB

D.C. CircuitNovember 17, 1998No. 97-1687
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Outcome

The court denied the employer's petition for review and enforced the NLRB's order finding violations of the National Labor Relations Act, including failure to provide relevant medical claims information to the union during negotiations, unlawful implementation of final offer, and wrongful refusal to reinstate striking employees.

What This Ruling Means

**United States Testing v. NLRB: Court Backs Workers' Rights During Contract Negotiations** This case involved a dispute between United States Testing Company and its workers' union during contract negotiations. The company committed several violations while bargaining with the union. First, it refused to share important medical claims information that the union needed to negotiate healthcare benefits. Second, the company unilaterally imposed its final contract offer without properly completing negotiations. Third, after workers went on strike, the company wrongfully refused to let them return to their jobs. The court sided with the workers and upheld the National Labor Relations Board's decision against the company. The court enforced the NLRB's order, which found that United States Testing had violated federal labor law in multiple ways during the bargaining process. This ruling matters because it reinforces important protections for workers during contract negotiations. Employers must share relevant information that unions need to bargain effectively, cannot simply force their preferred contract terms without proper negotiation, and must allow striking workers to return to their jobs when strikes end. These rules help ensure that collective bargaining remains fair and that workers maintain leverage when negotiating with their employers.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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