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Biden Vetoes Joint Employer Resolution: How to Protect Your Business

Biden Vetoes Joint Employer Resolution: How to Protect Your Business
Biden Vetoes Joint Employer Resolution: How to Protect Your Business


Despite President Biden’s May 3 veto following Congress’ attempt to overturn the National Labor Relations Board’s (NLRB) expansion of the Joint Employer Rule, the expanded rule remains dead — for now. Legal action is still pending regarding the rule, and serious questions remain about what this could mean for individual franchise businesses. Most importantly, how can franchisors best protect their businesses from government action like this moving forward?

“The one thing that I can safely say is what we have now is not the last word on the subject,” said Jim Paretti, an attorney for employment and labor relations law firm Littler Mendelson, during the International Franchise Association’s (IFA) April 23 webinar, “Joint Employer: Are Franchise Companies In the Clear?” The webinar also featured Michael Layman, IFA’s senior VP of government affairs and attorney Alex MacDonald, also of Littler Mendelson.

Related: Considering franchise ownership? Get started now to find your personalized list of franchises that match your lifestyle, interests and budget.

Related: Find Out Which Brands Have Ranked on the Franchise 500 for Longest, Earning a Spot In our New ‘Hall of Fame’

The expanded rule

The expanded Joint Employer Rule broadens the definition of joint employment, potentially making franchisors liable for employees they don’t directly employ or manage. It would have hurt both franchisees and franchisors. Franchisors would “be in a position that they can’t be liable for what somebody else is doing,” Paretti said, “so maybe they’re not going to franchise anymore. The franchise model just goes away, and franchisees are left holding the bag.”

Paretti also explained that if the courts resurrected the rule, he’d expect franchisors to begin exerting unprecedented control so that franchisees “start to look less like independent business people and more like middle managers who are not in business for themselves [or] making the decisions on a day-to-day basis. It’s all coming down from the top.”

Related: How the NLRB’s New Joint-Employer Rule Will Affect Franchisees and Franchisors and Redefine Franchise Relations

Biden veto

After the Senate and House passed Congressional Review Act Resolution S.J. Res. 49, the only remaining question was whether President Biden would sign it, an act the IFA said “would tie the hands of future NLRBs from instituting expansive joint employer standards and provide long-term certainty to franchising.”

As the attorneys predicted in the webinar, President Biden vetoed the legislation on May 3, 2024. Additionally, Paretti noted that he didn’t think there was the two-thirds support necessary to override the president.

“President Biden claims to be a champion for small businesses, but today he turned his back on franchising, a business model that’s done more to put countless Americans into small business ownership, particularly for traditionally underrepresented minorities, women and veterans,” said Matthew Haller, IFA president and CEO. “The Administration has solidified its position that it cares more about special interests than small business owners and their employees, who face a near-daily onslaught of costs and uncertainties from the Biden Administration’s regulatory assault.”

Related: This Looming Regulatory Change Is Endangering Your Entrepreneurial Livelihood. Here’s What You Can Do About It.

Lawsuits

The IFA led a coalition that included the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the American Hotel and Lodging Association and the National Retail Federation, which won a lawsuit challenging the expanded rule in Texas in March.

“We did get a good win down in Texas,” MacDonald said. “A lot of people are breathing a sigh of relief, but we can’t completely have a sigh of relief because there’s ongoing litigation and, frankly, these rules could come back.”

The NLRB has until later this month to appeal the Texas ruling, which Paretti thinks is likely.

Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is also challenging the rule in court, arguing that it is too narrow. The same coalition from the Texas case, led by the IFA, intervened in the D.C. lawsuit, and the court is considering a motion to dismiss. However, Paretti sees a longer path for that suit.

“I suspect as long as this percolates through the court system, this is going to end up at the Supreme Court in some form or fashion,” Paretti said. “I just don’t see a way that it doesn’t.”

Related: The NLRB’s New Joint Employer Rule Is So Extreme That Even California Rejected a State-Level Version of the Franchise-Killing Policy

What should franchisors do?

There are some simple and direct things franchisors can do today to start protecting and preparing their business for a revived expanded Joint Employer Rule.

First, MacDonald recommended thoroughly reviewing all contracts (with vendors, franchisees, etc.) for indirect or reserved control specifications, such as direct training requirements, right to exclude workers, background check requirements, minimum qualifications and specific staffing and coverage level requirements. Counter these risks by clearly assigning responsibility for as many essential terms and conditions as possible to the employer.

Next, scrutinize your business arrangements: Emphasize brand standards over individual worker standards when you do need service requirements in contracts or in-house reporting and inspections. Minimize your involvement in recruiting, timekeeping, record keeping, pay policies and other operations.

If a franchisor must inspect a site, MacDonald again recommended focusing on brand standards, not individual worker standards. “You want to be watching for things like cleanliness,” he said. “Is the brand label displayed in the right place? Are they clearly communicating that they are a franchisee? Are the products stocked? Rather than on how many employees are working at the desk and how those employees are acting. Those kinds of things can start to look like supervision as opposed to protecting your brand standards.”

Additionally, reduce your reliance on nonessential vendors — especially if they need to be on-site — and train your supervisors on how to interact with vendors. But most of all, MacDonald said, “Pick reliable partners. If you end up contracting with a vendor who is operating on the borderline, then these rules make it more likely that you could be responsible for that vendor’s misconduct or mistakes.”



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