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History & Photos
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1974 Health Care Amendments
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 | The NLRB's Rulemaking success before the Supreme Court in
1991 was front-page news. |
In 1974, the National Labor Relations Act was
amended to extend coverage and protection
to employees of non-profit hospitals. Nonprofit
hospital workers were covered by the original
Wagner Act in 1935, but were excluded in
1947 with the Taft-Hartley amendments.
When the new legislation was considered by
the Senate Committee on Labor and Public
Welfare, it was recognized that labor relations
in the health care industry required special
considerations. The Senate Labor Committee
sought to fashion a mechanism which would
insure that the needs of the patient would
be met during contingencies arising out of
labor disputes. The new law represented a
sound and equitable reconciliation of these
competing interests.
For the first time in its history, on July 2,
1987, the Board announced its decision to
engage in rulemaking on a major substantive
issue by publishing in the Federal Register
a "Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on
Collective-Bargaining Units in the Health
Care Industry." The Board's new rulemaking
venture encompassed 14 days of hearings,
in Washington, Chicago, and San Francisco.
The Board heard from 144 witnesses and
over 1800 commentators. The Board issued
its health care Rule on April 21, 1989. After
lengthy litigation, the Supreme Court finally approved the Board's Rule by unanimous vote on April 23,
1991. Since then, the long-disputed question of appropriate units in acute care hospitals has been
largely put to rest.
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 | Representation Appeals
Director Berton S. Subrin
chaired the NLRB's hearings
on the proposed health care
rule. He is shown (at right)
with Administrative Law Judge
Bernard Ries at a hearing.
A court reporter is in the
background. |
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