The Mercury News

Appeals court backs Jimmy John’s franchisee

- By Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S >> A company that owns 10 Jimmy John’s sandwich shops in the Twin Cities was within its rights to fire six union workers who circulated posters critical of the company’s sick-leave policy, a federal appeals court ruled Monday.

The full 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a three-judge appeals panel, which had affirmed a National Labor Relations Board ruling in favor of the workers, who were part of a unionizati­on drive by the Industrial Workers of the World at shops owned by MikLin Enterprise­s.

The full appeals court concluded that the poster attack was “so disloyal” that it wasn’t protected by federal labor law.

The posters were timed to the flu season in early 2011. They protested the company’s policy against workers calling in sick without finding replacemen­ts to take their shifts, and accused the company of putting the health of its customers at risk. The poster features two identical photos of Jimmy John’s sandwiches but said one was made by a healthy worker and one was made by a sick worker.

“Can’t tell the difference?” the poster read. “That’s too bad because Jimmy John’s workers don’t get paid sick days. Shoot, we can’t even call in sick. We hope your immune system is ready because you’re about to take the sandwich test.”

The poster and a press release were distribute­d to more than 100 local and national news organizati­ons, and the IWW threatened wider distributi­on if its demands were not met.

The NLRB concluded that MikLin violated protection­s for employee communicat­ions to the public that are part of an ongoing labor dispute. The three-judge appeals panel agreed.

But the full appeals court said the board misapplied a controllin­g precedent set in a 1953 U.S. Supreme Court case that permits firings for disloyalty when the quality of a company’s product is attacked, as opposed to communicat­ions targeting the employer’s labor practices.

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