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Franchise Restaurants Welcome Bill to Reverse Joint Employer Rule

The National Council of Chain Restaurants is applauding the introduction of the Save Local Businesses Act, legislation that would reverse expanded joint employer standards set by the National Labor Relations Board that have increased businesses’ ...

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The National Council of Chain Restaurants is applauding the introduction of the Save Local Businesses Act, legislation that would reverse expanded joint employer standards set by the National Labor Relations Board that have increased businesses’ exposure to lawsuits and unionization efforts.

“We commend Representatives Bradley Byrne, Virginia Foxx, Henry Cuellar, Lou Correa, Tim Walberg and the other sponsors for their leadership on this legislation, which will correct the regulatory overreach of the NLRB,” NCCR Executive Director Rob Green said. “The NLRB’s expansive and unbalanced ruling in 2015 created a definition of an employer that has challenged the business model for tens of thousands of business owners around the country.”

“The legislation introduced today will correct the NLRB’s regulatory rampage by restoring the sensible decades-old joint employer standard,” Green said. “This will create certainty and stability in business relationships and restore the appropriate standard of joint employment liability so that it is aligned with the realities of the 21st century economy and American free enterprise.”

In a 2015 case involving waste management company Browning Ferris and a staffing agency, the NLRB abandoned a 30-year-old position that a company had to have direct control over the actions of a subcontractor or franchisee’s employees to be considered a joint employer. Instead, the board said a company could be a joint employer even if it had indirect or unexercised control. In a separate case, the NLRB said McDonald’s could be considered a joint employer with its franchisees.

The issue is of concern to chain restaurants because many are owned by small business franchisee owners who operate independent restaurants in local communities around the country. The expanded joint employment standard makes it more difficult for individual restaurant owners to effectively operate their establishments and jeopardizes their business relationships with vendors.

Green’s comments came as he joined members of the House Education and Workforce Committee and the Coalition to Save Small and Local Businesses to announce introduction of the Save Local Businesses Act by Representative Bradley Byrne, R-Ala., chairman of the committee’s Workforce Protections Subcommittee. 

The National Council of Chain Restaurants is the leading trade association exclusively representing chain restaurant companies. For more than 40 years, NCCR has worked to advance sound public policy that best serves the interests of restaurant businesses and the millions of people they employ. NCCR members include the country’s most-respected quick-service and table-service chains. NCCR is a division of the National Retail Federation, the world’s largest retail trade group.