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Stanford Hospital & Clinics v. National Labor Relations Board

D.C. CircuitApril 18, 2003No. 01-1454Cited 25 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Ginsburg, Rogers, Tatel
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

RetaliationUnfair Labor Practice

Outcome

Court partially granted and partially denied the hospital's petition for review. The hospital prevailed on the eviction of union organizer Bruce Harland, but the NLRB prevailed on the overbreadth of the solicitation and distribution policy as applied to hallways and lounges outside patient units and to nonemployees throughout the facility.

What This Ruling Means

**Stanford Hospital & Clinics v. National Labor Relations Board (2003)** This case involved a dispute between Stanford Hospital and the National Labor Relations Board over union organizing activities. The hospital had evicted a union organizer named Bruce Harland from its property and enforced policies that restricted where employees and outside organizers could distribute union materials or talk to workers about joining a union. The court reached a split decision. It sided with the hospital on removing the union organizer from the property, agreeing that Stanford had the right to control who could be on hospital grounds. However, the court ruled against the hospital's broad restrictions on union activities. The court found that Stanford's policies were too sweeping when applied to areas like hallways and lounges outside patient units, and the hospital couldn't completely ban outside organizers from the entire facility. This ruling matters for workers because it clarifies their rights to organize unions at their workplace. While employers can remove outside organizers and protect patient areas, they cannot create overly broad policies that prevent workers from discussing unions in common areas like break rooms and hallways. Workers have protected rights to organize, even in healthcare settings where patient care is a priority.

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

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