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Frontier Telephone of Rochester Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

2nd CircuitMay 16, 2006No. No. 05-4710-cvCited 1 time
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Hall, Hon, Sotomayor
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

RetaliationWhistleblower

Outcome

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals denied Frontier Telephone's petition for review and granted the NLRB's cross-petition for enforcement, affirming the Board's findings that Frontier engaged in unfair labor practices by improperly accreting an unrepresented group into a bargaining unit and terminating Ronald Boulware due to anti-union animus.

What This Ruling Means

# Frontier Telephone of Rochester Inc. v. NLRB (2006) ## What Happened Ronald Boulware worked for Frontier Telephone of Rochester. The company fired him, and Boulware claimed it was because of his union activities. Additionally, Frontier attempted to add a group of workers without union representation into an existing union bargaining unit—the group of employees covered by a union contract. ## What the Court Decided The Second Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the National Labor Relations Board (the federal agency that oversees union matters). The court confirmed that Frontier engaged in illegal labor practices. Specifically, the company wrongfully terminated Boulware because of his union support and improperly tried to expand the non-union workforce into unionized positions. ## Why This Matters for Workers This ruling protects workers' rights to engage in union activities without fear of being fired. It also prevents employers from undermining union representation by secretly shifting unrepresented workers into union roles. The decision reinforces that workers cannot be punished for supporting unions—a fundamental protection under federal labor law.

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

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