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Multimedia KSDK, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

8th CircuitSeptember 10, 2002No. 00-1684, 00-1919Cited 1 time
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Hansen, McMillian, Bowman, Wollman, Loken, Murphy, Bye, Riley, Melloy
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.

Outcome

The employer KSDK prevailed on the producer classification issue. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals granted KSDK's petition for review and denied enforcement of the NLRB's order insofar as it pertained to producers, finding that the NLRB applied an improper legal standard in determining that producers were not supervisors under the National Labor Relations Act.

What This Ruling Means

**TV Station Wins Fight Over Whether Producers Are Supervisors** This case involved a dispute between television station KSDK and the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) about whether TV producers should be classified as supervisors or regular employees. The classification matters because supervisors cannot join unions or be protected by certain labor laws, while regular employees can. The NLRB had ruled that the producers were regular employees, not supervisors, which would have given them union rights. However, KSDK disagreed and challenged this decision in federal court. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals sided with KSDK, ruling that the NLRB used the wrong legal standard when making its decision. The court found that the producers should indeed be classified as supervisors under the National Labor Relations Act. **Why this matters for workers:** This decision affects employees in similar roles who want to unionize. When workers are classified as supervisors, they lose the right to join unions and certain workplace protections. This ruling makes it easier for employers to argue that employees with producer-type responsibilities are supervisors rather than regular workers, potentially limiting those employees' collective bargaining rights.

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

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