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5th Circuit Rejects “No-Recording” Policies in the Workplace

© 2017 The Texas Lawbook.

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By Anthony Campiti, Elizabeth Schartz and Barbara-Ellen Gaffney of Thompson & Knight

Tony Campiti

(Dec. 18) – A workplace policy or rule broadly prohibiting audio and video recordings by employees in the workplace without management approval violates the National Labor Relations Act, according to a recent decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in T-Mobile USA, Inc. v. NLRB.

The NLRA guarantees employees the right to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. Therefore, a work rule that employees would reasonably understand as prohibiting the exercise of their rights under the NLRA is unlawful.

T-Mobile maintained a personnel policy prohibiting recording — including audio and video — in the workplace without prior management approval. T-Mobile maintained that the ban’s stated purposes — “[t]o prevent harassment, maintain individual privacy, encourage open communication, and protect confidential information” — would advance legitimate business interests in a civil and secure workplace.

Nevertheless, the general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board argued that the recording ban was unlawful because employees could reasonably construe the language to prohibit protected concerted activity.

Elizabeth Schartz

The 5th Circuit agreed, holding that the rule’s plain terms were “stated so broadly that a reasonable employee, generally aware of employee rights, would interpret it to discourage protected concerted activity, such as even an off-duty employee photographing a wage schedule posted on a corporate bulletin board.”

Citing a similar decision recently handed down by the 2nd Circuit in Whole Foods Market Group Inc. v. NLRB, the court declined to discuss how far a recording ban may permissibly reach, stating in a footnote that “[w]e need not decide whether and to what extent such a right exists; we are satisfied that, as in the example provided above, there are circumstances in which taking photographs or recordings may be protected activity, and that T-Mobile has not provided any legitimate reason why its ban ought to be allowed to encompass such activity.” For this reason, the 5th Circuit affirmed the NLRB’s order directing T-Mobile to rescind its “no-recording” policy.

Barbara-Ellen Gaffney

This is not to say that every “no-recording” policy will necessarily infringe on employees’ legally-protected rights. In a footnote, the 2nd Circuit’s Whole Foods Market Group Inc. v. NLRB opinion specified that Whole Foods’ interests in maintaining “no-recording” policies could “be accommodated simply by their narrowing the policies’ scope.”

Accordingly, while it is possible to draft a “no-recording” policy that could pass muster under NLRB scrutiny, employers must be careful to limit such restrictions to only such activities in which employees are acting solely by and on behalf of themselves. In any event, employers should consult with counsel before disciplining an employee for recording a workplace conversation, interaction, or condition.

On a side note, the NLRB originally found that 15 separate personnel rules at T-Mobile violated employees’ rights under the NLRA. T-Mobile acquiesced to 11 of these and elected to appeal just four provisions in its handbook that “(1) encouraged employees to ‘maintain a positive work environment’; (2) prohibited ‘[a]rguing or fighting,’ ‘failing to treat others with respect,’ and ‘failing to demonstrate appropriate teamwork’; (3) prohibited all photography and audio or video recording in the workplace; and (4) prohibited access to electronic information by non-approved individuals.”

While the 5th Circuit ruled in favor of T-Mobile on all but the recording ban, employers should remain aware that the NLRB continues to actively scrutinize many workplace policies it deems to interfere with “concerted activities” protected by NLRA.

© 2017 The Texas Lawbook. Content of The Texas Lawbook is controlled and protected by specific licensing agreements with our subscribers and under federal copyright laws. Any distribution of this content without the consent of The Texas Lawbook is prohibited.

If you see any inaccuracy in any article in The Texas Lawbook, please contact us. Our goal is content that is 100% true and accurate. Thank you.

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