Questions Regarding Proposed Rule Narrowing "Advice" Exemption Dominate OLMS Web Chat

During a web chat run by the Office of Labor Management Standards (OLMS) to discuss the agency’s regulatory agenda, OLMS Director John Lund fielded several questions – but provided few concrete answers – regarding the OLMS’s proposal to narrow the scope of the “advice” exemption under the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA). This proposal would also expand what constitutes reportable “persuader activities” under the LMRDA, and subject employers and their advisors – including their attorneys – to new reporting requirements. Currently, employers are required to report information regarding persuader agreements with consultants on the Form LM-10, while consultants are required to report related information on the Form LM-20. Narrowing the “advice” exemption and expanding the definition of “persuader activities” would necessarily expand the reporting required on these forms.  Continue reading this entry at Littler's Labor Relations Counsel.

OLMS Holds Web Chat to Discuss Regulatory Agenda

On Friday, John Lund, Director of the Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS), conducted an online chat to discuss the agency’s upcoming regulatory activities. Lund noted, for example, that by July 2011, the agency plans to issue a final rule on Form LM-30, the Labor Organization Officer and Employee Report required under the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA), “to identify potential conflicts of interest between the labor organization officials and their labor organizations.” A proposed rule to revise this disclosure form was published in August 2010.  Continue reading this entry at Littler's Labor Relations Counsel

Office of Labor-Management Standards Proposes Rescission of Union Trust Reporting Requirements

Pencil erasingIn tomorrow’s Federal Register, the Department of Labor’s Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) will issue a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) (pdf) on its plans to amend regulations under the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) requiring labor organizations to file the annual financial disclosure Form T-1, (pdf) Trust Annual Report, about certain trusts in which they are interested. Unions use Form T-1 to disclose financial information about these trusts, such as assets, liabilities, receipts and disbursements. According to a summary of the NPRM, the DOL seeks to amend these regulations on the grounds that the current trust reporting requirement is overly broad and not necessary to prevent the circumvention and evasion of the Title II reporting requirements, which require labor organizations “to disclose its financial condition and operations.” In addition, the DOL considers separate trust reporting requirements as unnecessary, in part because the Department also proposes to return “subsidiary organization” reporting to the Form LM-2 reporting requirements, which it believes is necessary to satisfy the purposes of the LMRDA. Finally, the DOL takes the position that in interpreting the LMRDA’s definition of “labor organization,” the statute’s coverage does not include “intermediate bodies that are wholly composed of public sector organizations.”

The OLMS seeks public comment on the above proposals. All comments must be received on or before April 5, 2010, and include the identification number: RIN 1215-AB75. Written comments may be sent or hand-delivered to: Denise M. Boucher, Director of the Office of Policy, Reports and Disclosure, Office of Labor-Management Standards, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Room N–5609, Washington, DC 20210. Alternatively, comments may be submitted via the federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.

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