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AG Curtis Hill leads 15-state coalition seeking dismissal of lawsuit against energy and manufacturing companies

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Attorney General Curtis Hill announced today that Indiana is leading a 15-state coalition in support of a motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the cities of San Francisco and Oakland against various energy and manufacturing companies. Indiana is joined by Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming in the amicus brief.

Attorney General Hill issued the following statement regarding the matter:

“California localities cannot dictate national energy policy or curb economic activity that occurs outside California. Unfortunately, we have seen a trend of certain states drifting farther and farther away from real America. This is just the most recent example.

“We will let our amicus brief speak for itself at the courthouse. However, this matter should be dismissed because the suit filed by California municipalities is not about the law; rather, it is about circumventing separations of power and using California judges as the arbiters of national energy policy. New York City and various Colorado municipalities have filed copycat actions.

“While today California cities sue energy manufacturers to make up for massive deficits, tomorrow we could see suits against other job creators.

“Our amicus brief should send a loud message that the rest of the nation will not stand idle while California tries to become its own regulatory empire.”

Attached, see the amicus brief filed April 19.

Aces Baseball falls in rubber match with Valparaiso

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The University of Evansville had a chance to take their first Missouri Valley Conference series of the season Sunday afternoon at Braun Stadium. However, Valparaiso had a similar idea, and they managed to come away with 6-1 series-clinching victory.

Sophomore reliever Nathan Croner (0-2) was pressed into the start on the hill. However, the Crusaders cashed in a pair of runs on the southpaw and loaded up the bases before he could register the second out of the opening frame. Freshman Jace Burke, who pitched a sharp ninth inning in Saturday’s 9-8 win, earning a save, came in and put out the fire.

In the top of the second, Burke ran into similar problems, uncorking a wild pitch, allowing another Valparaiso run to tally, putting the Purple Aces in a 3-0 hole.

In the bottom of the frame, senior catcher Andrew Tanous launched his fourth home run of the season over the left field fence, drawing the Aces closer at 3-1.

However, that’s all the Evansville offense could muster, as Valparaiso starter Wes Gordon (1-4) combined with reliever Hayden Kissee to keep UE off the scoreboard the rest of the games, as UE fell, 6-1.

The loss drops the Aces to 7-26 and 1-8 in the MVC, while the Crusaders improved to 14-20 and 4-5 in league play.

Evansville is back in action Wednesday, as they play host to their crosstown rivals from the University of Southern Indiana. First pitch from Charles H. Braun Stadium is at 6 p.m.

Aces softball clinches series win over Valparaiso

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Aces take Sunday finale by 3-2 final

After jumping out to a 3-0 lead, the University of Evansville softball team was able to hang on for a 3-2 victory over Valparaiso in Sunday’s series finale.

UE (14-28, 7-12 MVC) starting pitcher Morgan Florey went the distance and struck out 15 Crusader (18-21, 5-12 MVC) batters.  The Purple Aces notched six hits on the day with two coming off the bat of freshman Toni Galas.

“We showed outstanding fight out of our ladies today! This team just never gives up,” Aces head coach Mat Mundell said.  “Morgan was just dominant in the circle today and was able to neutralize them all day.  We really did well this series, we have been so close all season and it is good to break through.”

Each team racked up hits in the opening three innings, but the Aces were the first to cross the plate, scoring three times in the top of the fourth.

With one out, Elyse Hickey reached on a Crusader error before advancing to second on a single by Mea Adams.  Alex Latoria was hit by a pitch to load the bases and bring up catcher Bailee Bostic.  She came through with a single to left field to bring home Hickey for the first run of the game.

Toni Galas was next for UE and singled up the middle to reload the bases and make it a 2-0 game.  Eryn Gould made it three RBI singles in a row as her infield single made it 3-0.  Following a pitching change, Valparaiso was able to record the final two outs to avoid further damage.

In the bottom of the frame, the Crusaders did their best to erase the UE lead.  Following a leadoff double, Valpo loaded the bases with no outs on a hit batter and a walk.  Morgan Florey never wavered in the circle and quickly regrouped to strike out the next three batters and keep the Crusaders off the board.

They were finally able to get through in the seventh with a pair of runs.  They had the tying run on second, but the 15thstrikeout of the day by Florey was the biggest as she clinched the 3-2 Evansville victory.

Next up, the Aces are home for four games this week.  UE welcomes Indiana State to Cooper Stadium on Tuesday for a 5 p.m. game before playing host to Southern Illinois next weekend in a 3-game set.

 

USI rallies to take series finale from Tampa, 6-3

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The University of Southern Indiana baseball team rallied to defeat the fourth-ranked University of Tampa, 6-3, Sunday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field to win the three-game series. USI watched its record go to 21-17 overall, while Tampa ends the game 32-7.

USI junior lefthander Chase Partain (Evansville, Indiana) led the way for the Eagles with the first complete game of his career. Partain (2-1) allowed three runs on seven hits and two walks, while striking out five.

The junior lefthander worked his way out of jams in the first three innings, allowing the three runs before setting down 11 of the final 13 Tampa hitters.

The Eagles and the Spartans plated a run in the opening frame with USI freshman centerfielder Bryce Krizan (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) scoring on a RBI-single by senior leftfieler Drake McNamara (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) to even the score, 1-1. Tampa got the lead with a run in the third and fourth to take a 3-1 lead and held the advantage until the bottom of the sixth.

USI evened the score, 3-3 in the sixth when senior rightfielder Buddy Johnson (Shelbyville, Kentucky) singled in sophomore second baseman Jacob Fleming (Evansville, Indiana) and McNamara.

The Eagles took their first lead of the game with a three-run eighth inning. Johnson struck again with a RBI-single to score McNamara for the 4-3 lead, while junior designated hitter Brodie Brown (Carmi, Illinois) sealed the victory with a two-run single  and a 6-3 margin.

Johnson led the Eagles at the plate with two hits and three RBIs, while Brown finished with the two RBIs in the eighth.

USI will be on the road for the next two games with visits to Kentucky Wesleyan College Tuesday for a 3 p.m. game and the University of Evansville Wednesday for a 6 p.m. start. The Eagles start their final homestand of the 2018 regular season next weekend, April 28-29, when they host McKendree University for a four-game GLVC series. Senior Day is April 29.

The final regular-season home game is May 1 when the University of Missouri-St. Louis visits USI for a 6 p.m. contest.

Daily Scriptures for the Week of April 23, 2018

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MONDAY
“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud.” 1 Corinthians 13:4 NIV

TUESDAY
“It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, itkeeps no record of wrongs.”
1 Corinthians 13:5 NIV

WEDNESDAY
“Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth.” 1 Corinthians 13:6 NIV

THURSDAY
“It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.” 1 Corinthians 13:7 NIV

FRIDAY
“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God.”
1 John 4:7 NIV

SATURDAY
“Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.” 1 John 4:8 NIV

SUNDAY
“This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.”
1 John 4:10 NIV

Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen Seltzer

IS IT TRUE APRIL 23, 2018

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

IS IT TRUE its been rumored that the members of the Winnecke Administration and movers and shakers of the Evansville Signature School could be negotiating a deal that will allow the City Of Evansville to give full control of the Victory Theater to the Evansville Signature School?  …we are told if this happens Venueworks contract may be voided and full control of the management and marketing of the Victory Theater could be the responsibility of the Evansville Signature School?

IS IT TRUE we commend Evansville Courier and Press writer John Martin for providing their reader’s with informative and accurate articles concerning complex issues?  … it’s a recognized fact that both John Martin and Jon Web are the literary mainstays of the Evansville Courier and Press?

IS IT TRUE that the University of Southern Indiana just concluded a national search for the next President of this institution of higher learning?  … it’s obvious that this nationwide search wasted approximately $100,000 of taxpayers dollars in order to find the next President of USI? …the Chairman of the Board of USI Trustees told members of the press that “competitive advantage in the selection process was now irrelevant” right after announcing that the current Provost of USI Ron Rochon was selected as the next President of USI? …we considered the statement made by the Chairman of the Board of USI Trustees that the “competitive advantage in the selection process was now irrelevant” very interesting?  …we hear how the search for the new President of USI was conducted could be a hot topic for students taking ethics classes at the University in months to come?

IS IT TRUE the search for the new president of USI reminds us when the former Evansville Mayor Jonathon Weinzapfel announced that he will be conducting a national search for a new Evansville Fire Chief? …that former Evansville Mayor Weinzapfel alleged that the national search committee has recommended that he appoint a City Councilman and fireman to be his next Fire Chief?

IS IT TRUE that its obvious that former Evansville Mayor of Evansville and Trustees of Institutions of USI should look up the true definition and the purpose of a “National Search”?

IS IT TRUE that Tortious interference, also known as intentional interference with contractual relations, in the common law of torts, occurs when one person intentionally damages someone else’s contractual or business relationships with a third party causing economic harm?  …when individuals colluding with each other to get a third party to interfere with a legal going concern in a way that a business is damaged for the reason of enhancing the blissful existence of a small number of privileged people could be considered Tortious interference? 

IS IT TRUE we respectfully suggest that the elected and appointed public officials who are involved in styling the new City of Evansville noise ordinance should be extremely aware that breaking the Tortious interference liability laws will not be allowed by those being affected by this overreaching noise ordinance?  …it’s been alleged that numerous e-mails were sent out between Harbors Edge residents, elected and appointed public officials concerning the drafting of the proposed noise ordinance have gotten into the wrong hands? …we are told if this ordinance passes the affected parties may sue all those involved in drafting this overreaching ordinance for Tortious interference?  … we have been told that majority of the City Council members (at least 5) have already agreed to support this ill-advised noise ordinance at this evening City Council meeting?  …we find it interesting how our elected city officials skip around the “Sunshine Laws”?

IS IT TRUE that Mole #4 tells us that roughly 20 Vectren employees were observed in company time volunteering to help the City of Evansville arborist in an effort to plant 500 trees near the Oakhill Cemetary?…these trees were planted at the same location where Vectren is planning to build a 4 MegaWatt solar field?…we are now beginning to wonder if there is a day in the future when the same Vectren employees volunteer to do a Paul Bunyan imitation and cut those 500 trees down to make way for the solar panels?…planning is a necessary exercise to avoid making efforts that must be undone because the right-hand doesn’t know what the left hand is doing?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: If the Republican primary for the 2nd District County Commission race was held today who would you vote for?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “Statehouse Files, Channel 44 News, Daily Devotions, Law enforcement, Readers Poll, Birthdays, Hot Jobs, and Local Sports.

You are now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com

 

AGENDA Of  EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL FOR APRIL 23, 2018

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AGENDA Of  EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL
APRIL 23, 2018 at 5:30 P.M.

I. INTRODUCTION

AGENDA Attachment:

II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDA

MEMO Attachment:

III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS

 

IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A. ORDINANCE F-2018-05 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 5/7/2018
F-2018-05 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE F-2018-07 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Repeals and Re-Appropriations within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 5/7/2018
F-2018-07 Attachment:
C. ORDINANCE R-2018-12 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 812 Lincoln Avenue Petitioner: Ruperto Burrows Owner: Ruperto Burrows Requested Change: C1 to C4 Ward: 4 Robinson Representative: Shawn M. Sullivan, Esq., Terrell, Baugh, Salmon & Born, LLP
R-2018-12 Attachment:
D. ORDINANCE R-2018-13 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as Part of 1000 W. Illinois Street, 1025, 1029, and 1033 W. Indiana Street Petitioner: Mike Stevens Owner: Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church Requested Change: R4 to M1 w/ UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: James Morley, Morley Corp.
R-2018-13 Attachment:
VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS
VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A. ORDINANCE G-2018-11 An Ordinance Creating Chapter 9.30 (Regulation of Noise) of the Evansville Municipal Code Sponsor(s): Adams, Robinson Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Adams 4/23/2018
G-2018-11 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE F-2018-04 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Repeal, Re-Appropriations within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 4/23/2018
F-2018-04 Attachment:
C. RESOLUTION C-2018-08 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Ratifying, Confirming, Authorizing and Approving an Agreement Between the City of Evansville and the Chauffeurs, Teamsters and Helpers Local Union No. 215 Sponsor(s): Robinson Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 4/23/2018
C-2018-08 Attachment:
D. RESOLUTION C-2018-09 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Ratifying, Confirming, Authorizing and Approving an Agreement Between the City of Evansville Metropolitan Evansville Transit System (METS) and the Chauffers, Teamsters and Helpers Local Union No. 215 Sponsor(s): Robinson Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 4/23/2018
C-2018-09 Attachment:
E. ORDINANCE R-2018-10 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 813 and 819 W. Iowa Street Petitioner: Delaware LLC Owner: Delaware LLC Requested Change: R4 to C4 w/ UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Ted C. Ziemer IV, Bingham, Greenebaum, Doll LLP
R-2018-10 Attachment:
F. ORDINANCE R-2018-11 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1000, 1024 and 1030 W. Illinois Street Petitioner: Mike Stevens Owner: Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church Requested Change: R4 to M1 & C2 w/UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: James Morley, Morley Corp.
R-2018-11 Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET
A. RESOLUTION C-2018-10 A Preliminary Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Declaring an Economic Development Target Area for Property Tax Phase-In for the Rehabilitation of Real Property at 4600 Washington Avenue, Evansville, IN 47714 – Washington Plaza Evansville, LLC Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 4/23/2018
C-2018-10 Attachment:
IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, May 7, 2018, at 5:30 p.m.
B. APPROVAL OF 2018 YOUTH GRANT RECOMMENDATIONS
C. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS
XI. ADJOURNMENT

Dysfunction And Infighting Cripple Labor Agency

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‘This Is Like When Yugoslavia Broke Up.’

It’s hardly new for politicians to wrangle over the National Labor Relations Board. This time, though, partisan warfare has penetrated the agency itself.

The agency is the National Labor Relations Board, created in 1935 to promote collective bargaining and adjudicate disputes between businesses and workers. An independent agency insulated — in theory — from partisan politics, the NLRB under President Donald Trump is consumed to the point of paralysis by fights over personnel policies, ethics rules and legal decisions that stem from ancient political disagreements over the proper balance of power between employers and workers.

The in-fighting is bad news for workers who seek the NLRB’s help to organize unions and increase corporate accountability for labor law violations — and also, paradoxically, bad news for employers who want to fight unionization and limit corporate liability by reversing pro-labor rulings issued under the Obama NLRB.

“This is like when Yugoslavia broke up,” said one employment lobbyist who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “You’re fighting over things that happened 10,000 years ago — you killed my ancestor so I’m going to kill you.”

At the center of the controversy, which has pitted civil servants against political appointees, conservatives against liberals and, on occasion, conservatives against other conservatives, are Peter Robb, the NLRB’s bare-knuckled general counsel, and board member William Emanuel, a controversial Trump appointee with deep ties to business.

Robb outraged the NLRB’s career staff in January by proposing a restructuring that would demote regional directors, whom the business lobby considers too pro-union. That prompted revolt from the NLRB’s employee unions. “Peter Robb is considering measures to ‘streamline’ the NLRB that will only make it harder to remedy federal labor law violations,” read a flyer that three New York union locals distributed at an event Robb attended in February.

Nearly 400 NLRB employees followed up March 15 in a letter sent to members of Congress that said Robb’s changes “strike us as unlikely to generate cost savings for the agency. What they do seem likely to achieve is the frustration of our efforts to provide members of the public with high quality, thorough investigation.”

The second and more elaborate NLRB controversy concerns Emanuel’s decision not to recuse himself in December from Hy-Brand Industrial Contractors, a pro-business ruling in which the NLRB’s inspector general later concluded Emanuel had a conflict of interest. After the inspector general issued his report, the NLRB vacated the ruling.

The two storylines crossed this month when Robb issued a legal opinion that said he “does not agree with the conclusions reached in the IG report,” and accused three NLRB members of breaking the law. Robb faulted the members — including the Republican chairman — for vacating Hy-Brand without consulting Emanuel, and urged the board to reinstate Hy-Brand. It’s highly unusual for an NLRB general counsel to criticize the board’s judgment so harshly. The White House, signaling apparent agreement with Robb, replaced NLRB Chairman Marvin Kaplan last week with the just-confirmed board member John Ring. (Kaplan will remain as board member.)

Meanwhile, the NLRB’s inspector general, David Berry, is investigating a second NLRB member, Mark Pearce, who is one of the board’s two Democrats. (By law, two of the NLRB’s five board members are chosen by whichever party does not occupy the White House.) Berry is following on a complaint filed by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a conservative nonprofit, based on a Wall Street Journal editorial that accused Pearce of alerting in advance attendees at an American Bar Association meeting in Puerto Rico that Hy-Brand would be vacated. Pearce did not answer a request for comment.

Berry, in turn, stands accused by the National Right To Work Legal Defense Foundation, the legal arm of the anti-union National Right To Work Committee, of disclosing confidential board deliberations improperly in his report on Emanuel, and in a follow-up report issued one month later. The right-to-work group asked an umbrella group, the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, to investigate. Berry did not answer a request for comment.

“It’s sort of like ‘Game of Thrones,’” said Roger King, a friend of Emanuel’s and senior labor and employment counsel for the HR Policy Association.

Or maybe three-dimensional chess. The National Right to Work Committee is a natural ally to Emanuel, but, remarkably, it’s come to regard Emanuel as a problem that must not be replicated in future NLRB nominations, lest pro-labor Democrats gain an upper hand through additional recusals.

In its March newsletter, the group revealed that the Trump administration ignored its advice “not to choose … another management attorney who would have to recuse himself or herself potentially from vast numbers of cases involving clients of the attorney’s former employer.” That advice, the newsletter complained, “went unheeded” when Trump nominated Ring, a partner at the management-side law firm Morgan, Lewis and Bockius, “whose client list is even longer than Littler Mendelson’s.” The Senate confirmed Ring last week.

“For the next year and a half,” warned National Right To Work Committee vice president Matthew Leen in the newsletter, “two of the three NLRB members who aren’t profoundly biased in favor of forced unionism may have to recuse themselves from multiple cases.”

In effect, Leen was saying that the Trump administration was so blatantly anti-labor that it may be unable to fulfill its anti-labor objectives.

It’s hardly new for politicians to wrangle over the NLRB. In 2012, the board made headlines when President Barack Obama tested the limits of his executive power by bypassing Congress and granting three recess appointments to the NLRB even though the Senate was technically in session. Obama ended up losing in the Supreme Court.

This time, though, partisan warfare has penetrated the agency itself.

General counsel Robb sent senior agency staffers reeling after he announced in a Jan. 11 conference call that he wanted to consolidate the agency’s 26 field offices into larger “districts” overseen by officials hand-picked by him. Under Robb’s plan, regional directors would lose their classification as members of the Senior Executive Service — the civil service’s highest rank — and be replaced by a new layer of officials who’d be answerable to Robb.

The title “general counsel” makes Robb sound like a lawyer for NLRB management, but in fact, it’s arguably the agency’s most powerful position. The NLRB general counsel is the agency’s gatekeeper, a sort of prosecutor who brings cases before the board. The vast majority of NLRB cases are processed at the NLRB’s 26 field offices and never reach the board. The field offices are staffed by career officials who don’t typically agree with the pro-management outlook of Robb, to whom they report.

In a letter to Robb shortly after the January conference call, the regional directors called his proposed changes “very major” and complained that they hadn’t “heard an explanation of the benefits to be gained.” They also warned that enacting such changes might prompt senior directors and managers to retire en masse — a clear shot across the bow.

In reply, another official from the general counsel’s office proposed by email additional restrictions on the decision-making power of regional officials, such as requiring all cases go through headquarters for initial review.

Robb declined to comment for this story and, according to a source familiar with his thinking, is upset that the controversy spilled into public view.

Marshall Babson, a former Democrat appointee to the NLRB, said that Robb’s proposed changes risk making the NLRB less efficient. “If you’re talking about injecting another level of review, that could slow things down,” he said.

Jennifer Abruzzo, who was acting general counsel before Robb, agreed. “I think that’s a mistake,” she said. “I think the regional directors know what they’re doing.”

Shifting rationales for the changes have intensified the career staff’s suspicions about Robb’s motives. At the March ABA meeting in Puerto Rico, Robb’s deputy John Kyle said they were intended to bring the agency in line with the White House’s proposed 9 percent budget cut for the agency. But the $1.3 trillion spending bill signed into law last month by President Donald Trump, H.R. 1625 (115), rejected that cut and maintained funding at current levels.

“It certainly undercuts the general counsel’s rationale for restructuring,” said Karen Cook, president of the NLRB Professional Association. “He will try to move forward with his plan, though, on the basis that he expects a severe cut to the 2019 budget.“

The budget picture grew more complex Tuesday when the White House budget office alerted NLRB that the agency should spend only $264 million of the $274 million it received in the spending bill, a 3.6 percent reduction. Such a rescission, were it to become permanent, would require congressional approval under the 1974 Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act.

“I am unaware of a single instance in the past wherein the White House or OMB subjected the NLRB to the budget rescission process,” said Marshall Babson, a former board member.

Fevered though the Robb Revolt is, it hasn’t yet engulfed members of the board itself. The same can’t be said about the controversy surrounding Emanuel and his participation in the December Hy-Brand decision.

Hy-Brand narrowed the circumstances under which a business could be classified as a so-called joint employer, jointly liable for labor violations committed by its contractors or franchisees. It reversed an earlier ruling in Browning-Ferris Industries, a 2016 decision by the Obama NLRB that broadened the circumstances under which a business could be classified a joint employer. Fast-food chains like McDonald’s were outraged by Browning-Ferris because it put them on the hook for maltreatment of employees over whom they didn’t necessarily maintain direct control.

Story Continued Below

Hy-Brand was rushed out along with several other pro-management decisions shortly before a Republican NLRB member’s term was about to end in December, leaving the board deadlocked, 2-2. The overturning of Browning-Ferristook many by surprise, because Hy-Brand wasn’t a case that had much to do with the joint-employer issue.

“It was a rush to judgment,” said Wilma Liebman, a Democratic board member under Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama.

One week after the Hy-Brand ruling, congressional Democrats accused the NLRB of loading the dice by allowing Emanuel to participate. Emanuel’s former law firm, Littler Mendelson, had represented a party in Browning-Ferris, noted a Dec. 21 letter to Emanuel from Senate HELP Committee ranking member Patty Murray (D-Wash.), House Education and the Workforce Committee ranking member Bobby Scott (D-Va.) and others. In the letter, the six Democrats posed several questions to Emanuel about his participation in Hy-Brand.

In his response, first reported by ProPublica, Emanuel said he wasn’t aware at the time of the ruling that his firm had been involved in Browning-Ferris, noting Littler’s very long client list. Unfortunately for Emanuel, he’d already noted his firm’s participation in Browning-Ferris on a questionnaire submitted during his confirmation hearing. Emanuel scrambled to revise his response, but the damage was done, and inspector general Berry opened an investigation. The first report, issued Feb. 9, was scathing, finding “a serious and flagrant problem and/or deficiency in the board’s administration of its deliberative process.” Emanuel, Berry concluded, should have recused himself from the decision to overturn the Obama-era standard.

The NLRB’s other three board members, including Trump-nominated chairman Marvin Kaplan, were persuaded by Berry’s reasoning and vacated Hy-Brand, waiting to act until after Emanuel departed for the ABA conference in Puerto Rico. Emanuel was stunned when a fellow attendee pulled up the ruling on a cellphone, according to a source who was present at the conference.

“You should have seen the look on his face,” this person said. “He had no knowledge of it in advance. He was totally floored.”

Emanuel, who declined to comment for this story, hired Zuckerman Spaeder, a prominent white-collar law firm that previously represented former International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Emanuel’s defenders insist he did nothing wrong because his firm wasn’t directly involved in Hy-Brand. Zuckerman Spaeder Chairman Dwight Bostwick argued in a letter to Berry that he’d evaluated Emanuel under an unusually strict standard that “has the potential to bedevil and frustrate this agency for years to come” and “‘weaponize’ the ethics rules for purposes of improperly excluding presidential appointees from doing the jobs they were sworn to do.”

Bostwick also wrote that one month after the Hy-Brand decision, the NLRB’s designated ethics official told Emanuel that she didn’t believe Emanuel should have been required to recuse himself in that case. According to the letter, Emanuel asked for that opinion in writing, but the request was denied at the OIG’s request.

Emanuel’s allies have cried foul, noting that former Democratic NLRB member Craig Becker participated in cases involving local chapters of the Service Employees International Union despite having previously been counsel to SEIU. In that instance, Berry raised no red flags. Becker declined to comment on the record.

The conflict-of-interest charge is “based on a house of cards and not a very strong one at that,” said King, the attorney with the HR Policy Association. “We see a long-term game plan to destabilize and undermine the NLRB.”

In his second inspector general report on Emanuel, issued March 20, Berry concluded that Emanuel violated the Trump administration’s ethics pledge, which states: “I will not for a period for two years from the date of my appointment participate in any particular matter involving specific parties that is directly and substantially related to my former employer or former clients.” But in his letter to Berry, Bostwick said he “respectfully disagree[d] … with the determination the member Emanuel violated his presidential ethics pledge.”

Berry acquitted Emanuel of the most serious charge: lying to Congress about whether he was aware of a possible conflict of interest. But that did little to cool Congress’ fury. After Berry issued the report, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) called on Emanuel to resign, saying he “no longer has the credibility” to serve.

CORRECTION: Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this story misstated a proposed reduction to the NLRB budget. Also, an earlier version of this story misstated the new NLRB Chairman’s first name and the name of the HR Policy Association.