In late summer of 2015, the National Labor Relations Board (“Board” or “NLRB”) issued its Browning-Ferris Industries (“BFI”) decision adopting an expanded joint employer standard. Under the Board’s new test, two or more employers are joint employers of the same employees if (1) they are “both employers [of a single workforce] within the meaning of the common law” and (2) they “share or codetermine those matters governing the [employees’] essential terms and conditions of employment.” In applying this test, the NLRB reversed thirty years of precedent by holding that it would no longer require a joint employer to both possess authority to control employees’ terms and conditions of employment and actually exercise such authority directly. Instead, the Board held that it would find joint employer status where the putative employer (i.e., the assumed employer) has the mere right to control “the means or manner of employees’ work and terms of employment” or actually exercises such control either directly or indirectly.
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