Hamilton Journal News

Court to decide if Federal Labor Relations Authority can regulate Ohio’s National Guard

- By Sabrina Eaton Advance Ohio Media

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear an Ohio case that asks whether the Federal Labor Relations Authority has the power to regulate the Ohio National Guard and its Adjutant General. The nation’s highest court agrees to hear between 100 to 150 of the more than 7,000 cases its asked to review every year.

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost says Ohio Solicitor General Ben Flowers will argue the state’s case before high court when it sets a trial date.

“I have consistent­ly gone to court to combat federal overreach, and this case is more of the same,” said a statement from Yost. “Long story short, the FLRA can regulate federal agencies only. Neither the Ohio National Guard nor Ohio Adjutant General’s Department is a federal agency. So the FLRA cannot regulate them.”

The case arose after a union representi­ng technician­s in Ohio’s Army and Air National Guards filed FLRA complaints that alleged the Ohio National Guard committed unfair labor practices by not deducting labor dues from paychecks, not bargaining in good faith, failing to recognize the union, reassignin­g some technician­s without consulting the union and recommendi­ng a halt to payroll deduction of union dues.

An administra­tive law judge determined the Ohio Guard hierarchy was covered by FLRA, and its dealings with union officials violated federal labor laws. A circuit court upheld its decision, concluding the Ohio Guard “is a federal executive agency.” Yost contends that ruling is wrong.

“The law is ossifying around a rule that degrades the Constituti­on’s separation of powers,” says Yost’s brief, urging the court to “review the matter before that happens.”

Attorneys for the FLRA said the lower court rulings were correct. It said the technician­s have the right to collective­ly bargain under the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Act because they are federal civilian employees and because Ohio acts as representa­tives of a covered agency when it supervises them.

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