Author Topic: NLRB Rules Hooters Waitresses Need Not Be Respectful of Employees  (Read 315 times)

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Offline flowers

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http://freebeacon.com/issues/nlrb-rules-hooters-waitresses-need-not-be-respectful-of-employees/

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A New York National Labor Relations Board judge ruled that a Hooters franchise cannot force its employees to act in a respectful manner toward customers, nor could managers punish employees for insubordination.

The local NLRB judge ordered the Hooters franchise to post a sign on its premises reading “WE WILL NOT maintain or enforce a provision in our Employee Handbook that prohibits employees from being disrespectful to the Company, other employees, customers, partners, and competitors, posting no offensive language or pictures and no negative comments about the Company or coworkers of the Company” after declaring such policies illegal, according to an NLRB ruling issued on May 18.

The case stemmed from a complaint about a rigged bikini contest that led the franchise to fire waitress Alexis Hanson. Hanson was fired in 2013 after she alleged that her co-worker “[Pamela] Noble had rigged the [bikini] contest with her best friend as a judge,” according to the NLRB investigation.

Managers soon had to call the police after Hanson confronted Noble about her bikini aptitude with a string of obscenities.

“Noble said she was intimidated and frightened and that employee Karen took her back to the restaurant and she never saw Panitch and Hanson again that evening,” the NLRB report says.

Despite the intimidation and foul language, the NLRB judge ordered the franchise give Hanson backpay and rehire her “without prejudice to her seniority.”

Hooters did not respond to request for comment.

Veteran management-side labor lawyer David Phippen of Constangy, Brooks, and Smith said that the unusual case could have a ripple effect throughout the entire economy.

Rules about respecting customers are designed to help employees keep their jobs, according to Phippen, since they spell out a code of conduct necessary for employment. Employees could find themselves out of a job with no “fair notice” without them, he warned.

“If these rules are not lawful under the Obama majority NLRB view, then almost no rule out there is lawful under that view,” he said. “Why as a matter of public policy would we want the employer’s to stop giving employees advanced ‘fair notice’ of what they might be terminated for?”

Customers were nonplussed by the decision. A frequent Hooters patron, who requested anonymity so he could speak freely, said that he may cut back on his bi-weekly visits if such policies go into effect nationwide.


Offline SouthTexas

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Re: NLRB Rules Hooters Waitresses Need Not Be Respectful of Employees
« Reply #1 on: May 26, 2014, 04:07:57 pm »
“WE WILL NOT maintain or enforce a provision in our Employee Handbook that prohibits employees from being disrespectful to the Company, other employees, customers, partners, and competitors, posting no offensive language or pictures and no negative comments about the Company or coworkers of the Company”

I'm sure that will apply to the NLRB rulings as well, right?