|  | FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE |
Senator
Tim
Scott
Statement
on
Latest
NLRB
Court
Decision |
Washington
–
U.S.
Senator
Tim
Scott
(R-SC)
issued
the
following
statement
in
response
to
a
ruling
by
the
U.S.
Court
of
Appeals
for
the
Fourth
Circuit
that
the
National
Labor
Relations
Board
(NLRB)
overstepped
its
authority
when
it
issued
the
so-called
“Poster
Rule,”
requiring
employers
to
post
notices
informing
workers
of
their
right
to
unionize.
The
case
was
filed
by
the
U.
S.
Chamber
of
Commerce
and
the
South
Carolina
Chamber
of
Commerce
in
South
Carolina
federal
court,
which
ruled
in
April
that
the
NLRB
acted
outside
its
authority
in
administering
the
“Poster
Rule.”
“The
NLRB
has
routinely
made
it
harder
for
businesses
to
succeed,
grow,
and
create
jobs,”
said
Senator
Scott.
“The
NLRB
was
established
as
an
unbiased
arbiter,
but
President
Obama
has
turned
it
into
a
pro-union,
anti-right-to-work
organization
that
often
oversteps
its
bounds.
I
applaud
this
court
decision,
which
recognizes
that
the
board
has
taken
on
an
unintended
activist
role.
By
undoing
the
burdens
placed
on
businesses by
the
NLRB,
we
can
make
it
easier
to
get
our
economy
back
on
track
and
allow
more
folks
to
get
back
to
work.”
The
"Poster
Rule"
did
not
require
balanced
information
such
as
employees’
rights
to
decertify
unwanted
unions
or
refuse
to
pay
union
dues
for
political
purposes.
This
decision
is
consistent
with
a
ruling
by
the
U.S.
Court
of
Appeals
for
the
D.C.
Circuit
last
month,
while
also
finding
that
the
NLRB’s
rulemaking
powers
are
limited.
Earlier
this
year,
Senator
Scott
joined
his
colleagues
in
introducing
the
Advice
and
Consent
Restoration
Act,
which
would
eliminate
pay
for
unconstitutionally
appointed
members
of
the
NLRB.
Senator
Scott
also
joined
an
amicus
brief
filed
with
the
Supreme
Court,
asking
the
court
to
consider
the
legality
of
the
President’s
appointments
to
the
NLRB.
Court
rulings
earlier
this
year
found
the
President’s
so-called
“recess”
appointments
to
the
board
invalid.
### |
|
|
Senator
Tim
Scott
represents
the
great
state
of
South
Carolina
in
the
United
States
Senate.
For
more
information,
please
visit
the
Senator's website,
follow
him
on
Twitter,
Instagram, and
on Facebook. |
Charleston
Office:
2500
City
Hall
Lane,
3rd
Floor
Suite North
Charleston,
SC
29406
T
(843)
727-4525 F
(843)
554-9320 |
Columbia
Office:
1301
Gervais
Street,
Suite
825
Columbia,
SC
29201
T
(803)
771-6112 F
(803)
771-6455 |
Greenville
Office:
40
W.
Broad
Street,
Suite
320 Greenville,
SC
29601
T
(864)
233-5366 F
(864)
271-8901 |
Washington
Office:
167
Russell
Senate
Office
Building Washington,
DC
20510
T
(202)
224-6121 F
(202)
228-5143 |
| |
|
|