Pay Secrecy
SuperDuty
2 Posts
Is anyone aware of any federal laws prohibiting pay secrecy policies or prohibiting discipline if an employee breaks this policy?
Comments
Gene
BTW, welcome to the forum! Not trying to be short with you, however, there are certain permissable scenarios where an employer can have a wage confidentiality policy, however, enforcing it is another thing. The courts have viewed an employee communicating about his/her wages to be a protected concerted activity. So, perhaps if you can tell us more about the situation and what you are trying to accomplish, many of the seasoned pro's here can give you some great advice.
Currently we have an individual (administrative clerk) who has continued to discuss her pay even after several conversations with HR. We want to get this stopped, but caution ourselves due to the same belief you wrote that this is largely considered an unfair labor practice.
Gene
Now if your personnel clerk is telling everyone's wage that is different.
If ees are talking about the fact they do not believe that the compensation for their position is fair/competitive, etc., I think it is protected. If they discuss that XYZ company pays people in similar positions more money and that they should get the same level of pay, I think it is protected. If they talk about their "intangibles" - benefits, retirement, etc., I think it is protected.
I do not think that Don and Gene standing around the water cooler commenting on how much money Ray makes is protected. I do not see any correlation with Don and Gene's conditions of employment that would afford them protection for talking about Ray's rate of pay. Add Ray to the equation and it is a different story. I do not believe that ees have the right to dicuss other people's compensation. That is confidential information. If Ray tells them how much he makes - good for him. Otherwise I would tell Don and Gene that it is not appropriate to discuss another ees pay and that they need to stop. JMHO.
Fast forward three weeks and we're in a hearing. "Yes sir, I did mention Ray's salary. Ray had asked me earlier that morning if I thought it was fair that he made less than Ophelia Butts who does the same job." "Yes sir, I was suspended for three days for that and we have been talking about our wages for almost a year, cause we don't think we are paid fairly. They just over reacted when they heard me mention Ray and he came running around the corner like a bull elephant pointing at me and hollering, "Ha, gotcha now!" First thing I knowed, I was home without pay for three days."
The point here, with the NLRA, as patrolled by the NLRB, it does not matter one whit what the employer's representative 'THINKS' or where the employer 'MIGHT' like to draw the line. Those sorts of notions will only incite these young NLRB lawyer-agents and get them booked at the motel closest to your facility for a couple of weeks.
The number one thing that gets places organized is a heavy handed notion by the employer and his representatives that they have a right to exercise certain unreasonable controls over its employees and their actions (like speech and conversation). THE ANSWER TO UNION FREE ENVIRONMENTS IS "REMOVING THE ISSUES", NOT PUTTING THEM IN PLACE!
Your argument makes sense, I will defnitely look at this in a different light now. Even though there are circumstances where this discussion may not be anyone acting as a "representative" for a group, or involved in "concerted" dialogue, you are right, we would tell the truth, but we cannot expect others to do the same. That unfortunately, is the sad truth.
GOOD LUCK, you do not want to face the NLRB, I have once and it was not fun. We removed the rule and the issues went away, we were lucky. My current company wanted to keep this rule in place when I came. Against my advice, it remained in set of work rules, but it has never been exercised and I hope that it never does before I retire, one more time in about 5 more years.
PORK
And even if you don't have an organizing campaign, the least of it may be the virtual embarassment of having to post on all of your bulletin boards, for 45 days, a notice to the effect that you violated the NLRA by telling employees they could not discuss their wages. Believe me, it will happen. You do not need the embarassment. Peace x:-)