St. Louis

In Illinois services:
Adams | Gallatin | Pike |
Alexander | Greene | Pope |
Bond | Hamilton | Pulaski |
Brown | Hardin | Randolph |
Calhoun | Jackson | Richland |
Christian | Jasper | St. Clair |
Clark | Jefferson | Saline |
Clay | Jersey | Scott |
Clinton | Johnson | Shelby |
Coles | Lawrence | Union |
Crawford | Macoupin | Wabash |
Cumberland | Madison | Washington |
Edgar | Marion | Wayne |
Edwards | Massac | White |
Effingham | Monroe | Williamson Counties |
Fayette | Montgomery | |
Franklin | Perry |
In Missouri, services:
Audrain | Lewis | Ripley |
Bollinger | Lincoln | St. Charles |
Butler | Madison | St. Francois |
Callaway | Maries | St. Louis |
Cape Girardeau | Marion | St. Genevieve |
Carter | Monroe | Scotland |
Clark | Montgomery | Scott |
Crawford | Oregon | Shannon |
Dent | Osage | Shelby |
Franklin | Perry | Stoddard |
Gasconade | Phelps | Warren |
Iron | Pike | Washington |
Jefferson | Ralls | Wayne Counties |
Knox | Reynolds | the Independent City of St. Louis |
Adair | De Kalb | Moniteau |
Andrew | Douglas | Morgan |
Atchison | Gentry | Newton |
Barry | Greene | Nodaway |
Barton | Grundy | Ozark |
Bates | Harrison | Pettis |
Benton | Henry | Platte |
Boone | Hickory | Polk |
Buchanan | Holt | Pulaski |
Caldwell | Howard | Putnam |
Camden | Howell | Randolph |
Carroll | Jackson | Ray |
Cass | Jasper | St. Clair |
Cedar | Johnson | Saline |
Chariton | Laclede | Schuyler |
Christian | Lafayette | Stone |
Clay | Lawrence | Sullivan |
Clinton | Linn | Taney |
Cole | Livingston | Texas |
Cooper | McDonald | Vernon |
Dade | Macon | Webster |
Dallas | Mercer | Worth |
Daviess | Miller | Wright Counties |
In Iowa, services:
Fremont | Mills | Pottawattamie Counties |
In Nebraska, services:
Adams | Gage | Nuckolls |
Antelope | Garfield | Otoe |
Arthur | Gosper | Pawnee |
Blaine | Grant | Perkins |
Boone | Greeley | Phelps |
Boyd | Hall | Pierce |
Brown | Hamilton | Platte |
Buffalo | Harlan | Polk |
Burt | Hayes | Red Willow |
Butler | Hitchcock | Richardson |
Cass | Holt | Rock |
Cedar | Hooker | Saline |
Chase | Howard | Sarpy |
Cherry | Jefferson | Saunders |
Clay | Johnson | Seward |
Colfax | Kearney | Sherman |
Cuming | Keith | Stanton |
Custer | Keya Paha | Thayer |
Dakota | Knox | Thomas |
Dawson | Lancaster | Thurston |
Dixon | Lincoln | Valley |
Dodge | Logan | Washington |
Douglas | Loup | Wayne |
Dundy | McPherson | Webster |
Fillmore | Madison | Wheeler |
Franklin | Merrick | York Counties |
Frontier | Nance | |
Furnas | Nemaha |
Persons may also obtain service at the Resident Office in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Established in 1935, the National Labor Relations Board is an independent federal agency that protects employees, employers, and unions from unfair labor practices and protects the right of private sector employees to join together, with or without a union, to improve wages, benefits and working conditions. The NLRB conducts hundreds of workplace elections and investigates thousands of unfair labor practice charges each year. Region 14 serves areas in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma from its Regional Office in St. Louis, its Subregional Office in Overland Park, and its Resident Office in Tulsa.
Federal judge orders reinstatement of Illinois coal miner at NLRB request
A federal judge has ordered mine operator Big Ridge, Inc. to reinstate an employee who was an outspoken supporter of the United Mine Workers of America and was fired two days after a contentious union election.
The temporary injunction issued April 30 by U.S. District Court Judge G. Patrick Murphy also orders the company to stop threatening employees with job loss or other reprisals because they support the union. It will stay in effect until the NLRB process is complete.
Employees at Kansas beef packing plant vote in favor of union representation
Employees at the National Beef Packing Co. plant in Dodge City, Kansas, have voted in favor of union representation in a two-day NLRB-supervised secret ballot election.
The tally of ballots, released early Saturday, Nov. 5, was 1,292 in favor of representation by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, and 824 opposed.
Missouri company agrees to significant backpay and access remedies to settle charges of unlawful behavior during union organizing campaigns
American Directional Boring, a Missouri company that installs cable and fiber optics, has paid $262,500 to eight former employees who were fired for trying to organize a union at the company’s St. Louis facility. The company also agreed to significant remedies, including granting access and providing employee names to union organizers.
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