Employment Standards Administration
Office of Labor-Management
Standards
Compliance Assistance
The Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act
The Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959, as amended
(LMRDA), grants certain rights to union members and protects their interests by
promoting democratic procedures within labor organizations. The Act establishes
a Bill of Rights for union members; reporting requirements for labor
organizations, union officers and employees, employers, labor-relations
consultants, and surety companies; standards for the regular election of union
officers; and safeguards for protecting labor organization funds and assets.
Unions representing Federal employees are similarly covered by the implementing
regulations of the standards of conduct provisions of the Civil Service Reform
Act of 1978. Unions representing solely state, county, and municipal employees
are not covered by either of these laws.
The Secretary of Labor enforces certain provisions of the LMRDA and has
delegated that authority to the Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) of
the Department of Labor's Employment Standards Administration. Other provisions
may only be enforced by union members through a private suit in a Federal
district court. Outlined below are the major provisions of the LMRDA.
Title I - Bill of Rights of Union Members
- Union members have equal rights to nominate candidates for union office,
vote in union elections, and participate in union meetings. They may also meet
with other members and express any opinions.
- Unions may impose assessments and raise dues only by democratic
procedures. In addition, unions must afford members a full and fair hearing of
charges against them.
- Unions must inform their members about provisions of the LMRDA.
- Members may enforce Title I rights through a private suit against the
union, but may be required to exhaust internal union remedies for up to four
months.
- Union members and nonunion employees have the right to receive or to
inspect collective bargaining agreements. This right may be enforced by a
union member or by the Secretary of Labor.
Title II - Reporting Requirements
- Unions must file information reports, constitutions and bylaws, and annual
financial reports with OLMS.
- Officers and employees of labor unions must report any loans and benefits
received from, or certain financial interests in, employers whose employees
their unions represent and businesses that deal with their unions.
- Employers and labor-relations consultants who engage in certain activities
to persuade employees about their union activities or to supply information to
the employer must file reports.
- Surety companies which issue bonds required by the LMRDA or the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 must report data such as premiums
received, total claims paid, and amounts recovered.
- The Secretary of Labor has authority to enforce the reporting requirements
of the Act.
- The reports and documents filed with OLMS are public information and any
person may examine them or obtain copies at OLMS offices.
- Filers must retain the records necessary to verify the reports for at
least five years.
- Unions must make reports available to members and permit members to
examine records for just cause.
Title III - Trusteeships
- A parent union which places a subordinate body under trusteeship must file
initial, semiannual, and terminal trusteeship reports.
- A trusteeship may only be imposed for the purposes specified in the LMRDA
and must be established and administered in accordance with the constitution
and bylaws of the labor organization which has imposed the trusteeship.
- A parent union which imposes a trusteeship may not engage in specified
acts involving the funds and delegate votes from a trusteed union.
- The Secretary of Labor has authority to investigate alleged violations of
this Title. A union member or a subordinate labor organization may also
enforce Title III provisions except for the reporting requirements.
Title IV - Elections
- Local unions must elect their officers by secret ballot; international
unions and intermediate bodies must elect their officers by secret ballot vote
of the members or by delegates chosen by secret ballot.
- International unions must hold elections at least every five years,
intermediate bodies every four years, and local unions every three years.
- Unions must comply with a candidate's request to distribute campaign
material to members at the candidate's own expense and must also refrain from
discriminating against any candidate with respect to the use of membership
lists. Candidates have the right to inspect a list containing the names and
addresses of members subject to a union security agreement within 30 days
prior to the election.
- A member in good standing has the right to nominate candidates, to be a
candidate subject to reasonable qualifications uniformly imposed, to hold
office, and to support and vote for the candidates of the member's choice.
- Unions must mail a notice of election to every member at the member's
last-known home address at least 15 days prior to the election.
- A member whose dues have been withheld by an employer may not be declared
ineligible to vote or to be a candidate for office by reason of alleged delay
or default in the payment of dues.
- Unions must conduct regular elections of officers in accordance with their
constitution and bylaws and preserve all election records for one year.
- Union and employer funds may not be used to promote the candidacy of any
candidate. Union funds may be utilized for expenses necessary for the conduct
of an election.
- Union members may hold a secret ballot vote to remove from office an
elected local union official guilty of serious misconduct if the Secretary of
Labor finds that the union constitution and bylaws do not provide adequate
procedures for such a removal.
- Union members who have exhausted internal union election remedies or who
have invoked such remedies without obtaining a final decision within three
calendar months after their invocation may file a complaint with the Secretary
within one calendar month thereafter.
- The Secretary of Labor has authority to file suit in a Federal district
court to set aside an invalid election and to request a new election under the
supervision of the Secretary and in accordance with Title IV.
Title V - Safeguards for Labor Organizations
- Officers have a duty to manage the funds and property of the union solely
for the benefit of the union in accordance with its constitution and bylaws.
- A union officer or employee who embezzles or otherwise misappropriates
union funds or other assets commits a Federal crime punishable by a fine
and/or imprisonment.
- Officials who handle union funds or property must be bonded to provide
protection against losses.
- A union may not have outstanding loans to any one officer or employee that
in total exceed $2,000.
- A union or employer may not pay the fine of any officer or employee
convicted of any willful violation of the LMRDA.
- Persons convicted of certain crimes may not hold union office or
employment for up to 13 years after conviction or after the end of
imprisonment.
Title VI - Miscellaneous Provisions
- Authority is granted to the Secretary of Labor to investigate possible
violations of most provisions of the LMRDA (except those specifically
excluded) and to enter premises, examine records, and question persons in the
course of the investigation.
- A union or any of its officials may not fine, suspend, expel, or otherwise
discipline a member for exercise of rights under the LMRDA.
- No one may use or threaten to use force or violence to interfere with a
union member in the exercise of LMRDA rights.
Title VII - Amendments to the Taft-Hartley Act
- Another law, the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA), also called the
Taft-Hartley Act, is amended by the LMRDA concerning strikes, boycotts, and
picketing. The LMRA is administered by the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB), an independent Federal agency.
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Staff is available at all OLMS field offices to answer questions about the
LMRDA and to assist union officers and others affected by the law's provisions.
In addition, copies of the full text of the LMRDA, reports filed under the
LMRDA, union constitutions, blank reporting forms and instructions, and
explanatory pamphlets about the law may be obtained from any of the OLMS
field office[s]:
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