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A landmark ruling challenges the Board’s authority to reshape labor law through case decisions rather than formal rulemaking.

In a significant development for labor relations, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has invalidated a controversial National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) policy that fundamentally altered how unions can gain recognition in workplaces. The decision delivers a major blow to the Board’s sweeping changes to union organizing rules.

The Case and the Cemex Framework

The dispute arose from a union organizing drive at a Kentucky bourbon distillery where management implemented wage increases and enhanced benefits before a vote on representation. When employees rejected unionization by more than three to one, the union challenged the election. An administrative law judge found labor law violations and recommended forcing the employer to recognize the union despite its electoral defeat.

The NLRB upheld this remedy under a new framework announced in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC. The Cemex framework marked a significant departure from nearly half a century of precedent: rather than demanding evidence of severe misconduct or the impossibility of a fair re-vote, it mandated that any labor law violation by an employer during a campaign—where a union had first sought voluntary recognition—would automatically lead to a bargaining order.

The Sixth Circuit Strikes Down Cemex

While the appellate panel upheld the findings of unlawful conduct, it rejected the bargaining order remedy entirely. The court ruled that Cemex established “a general rule of broad applicability” through case adjudication rather than through the formal notice-and-comment rulemaking process required for such sweeping policy changes.

Critically, the court found that the new framework wasn’t necessary to resolve the specific Cemex dispute itself, since existing Supreme Court precedent would have produced the same result. Because Cemex was designed to govern all future cases rather than address specific circumstances, the court ruled it constituted improper rulemaking disguised as adjudication under the Administrative Procedure Act.

The Road Ahead

This decision provides employers with substantial grounds to challenge bargaining orders based on Cemex. The NLRB historically follows a “non-acquiescence” approach, treating circuit court decisions as binding only in specific cases. 

While we hope the NLRB will also overturn the Cemex framework through its own processes, progress has been notably slow, and the General Counsel does not appear to be pursuing or taking any formal steps forward on this matter.

The Sixth Circuit’s ruling didn’t address another significant Cemex component: the requirement that employers file for an election within two weeks of receiving a union recognition demand or face automatic recognition without any employee vote. Employers should preserve arguments challenging this requirement for future appellate review.

The original Cemex case remains under review in the Ninth Circuit, where it’s uncertain whether that court will adopt the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning. Until the legal landscape clarifies, employers must prepare to defend against bargaining orders under both traditional standards and the Cemex framework.

Beyond union organizing, this decision may impact how the NLRB exercises policymaking authority more broadly. The court’s reasoning could apply to other instances where the Board has used case adjudication to establish prospective rules with broad application. As this legal landscape evolves, staying informed and consulting experienced counsel remain essential for employers facing union organizing activity or NLRB proceedings.