The Minnesota Labor Relations Act is a Minnesota labor relations statute that was enacted in 1939.[1]
References
edit- ^ "About Us". Bureau of Mediation Services. St. Paul: Minnesota.gov. October 19, 2018 [2016]. Retrieved 2018-11-06.
In 1939, the state legislature enacted the Minnesota Labor Relations Act (Minnesota Statutes 179) as a means of peacefully settling disputes resulting from the growing size and strength of Minnesota's labor movement. The Act recognized that a sound economy is aided by a constructive labor-management environment. To administer the Act, the legislature created the Division of Conciliation, the forerunner of the present Bureau of Mediation Services. The Division was to perform four functions: conciliation/mediation, arbitration, bargaining unit determinations, and bargaining unit certification elections.
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Further reading
edit- Heaney, Gerald W., and Robert Latz. "The Minnesota and National Labor Relations Acts--A Substantive and Procedural Comparison". Minnesota Law Review, vol. 38, no. 7, June 1954, p. 730-796.
- Stieber, Jack. Ten years of the Minnesota Labor Relations Act. Vol. 9. Industrial Relations Center, University of Minnesota, 1949.
- Stieber, Jack. "Minnesota Labor Relations Act-An Opinion Survey." Harvard Business Review 27.6 (1949): 665-677.
- Heaney, Gerald. "Labor Relations--A National or a State Problem." Minn. L. Rev. 26 (1941): 359.
- Lazar, Joseph; Seltzer, George; Lombardi, Vincent. "Tripartite Commissions in Public Interest Labor Disputes Under the Minnesota Labor Relations Act" (PDF). Labor Law Journal (Article). 17 (5). CCH Incorporated: 297–309. Retrieved 2018-11-06 – via EBSCO SocINDEX with Full Text.