NLRB Clears Path for Amazon to Challenge Staten Island Union Certification in Federal Court

By Adam Keating

On April 3, 2026, the National Labor Relations Board issued its long-anticipated decision in Amazon.com Services LLC, 374 NLRB No. 82, ordering Amazon to recognize and bargain with the Amazon Labor Union, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 1 (“ALU-IBT”) at its JFK8 fulfillment center in Staten Island, New York. The decision closes one chapter of what has become the most closely watched private-sector organizing campaign in a generation, and opens the next, as Amazon is now positioned to test the validity of the underlying certification in federal appellate court.

Background

The ALU’s election victory at JFK8 in April 2022 was a watershed moment for the American labor movement. A grassroots, worker-led union, organized largely through social media and in-person outreach at a bus stop outside the facility, defeated one of the world’s largest employers in a representation election. Amazon promptly filed objections to the election, alleging misconduct by the Union and the Board’s regional office that it argued tainted the results and warranted a new vote.

Those objections wound their way through the Board’s administrative process for years. A hearing officer recommended overruling Amazon’s objections, and the Regional Director ultimately certified the ALU as the exclusive bargaining representative. Amazon then refused to bargain and, in the process, utilized a classic “test of certification” maneuver that allows an employer to obtain judicial review of the underlying representation determination by forcing an unfair labor practice finding that can be appealed to a United States Court of Appeals.

The Board’s Decision

The Board’s decision in Amazon.com Services LLC follows a well-worn procedural path. The Acting General Counsel moved for summary judgment on the 8(a)(5) refusal-to-bargain complaint, and the Board granted it. Consistent with its longstanding rule, the Board declined to permit Amazon to relitigate in the unfair labor practice proceeding any issue that was or could have been raised in the representation case. The Board found that Amazon violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by refusing to recognize and bargain with the ALU-IBT and ordered Amazon to do so upon request.

The Board also extended the certification year (the one-year period during which a newly certified union’s status is generally irrebuttable) to run from the date Amazon commences good-faith bargaining, following the Mar-Jac Poultry Co. framework. Amazon was further directed to post a notice to employees at the JFK8 facility.

Notably, the ALU-IBT’s affiliation with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which occurred after the original certification, did not present a barrier to the Board’s order. The Board treated the affiliated entity as a successor to the originally certified union for purposes of the bargaining obligation.

What Comes Next

The practical significance of the decision lies not in the Board’s order itself, which was largely a foregone conclusion once Amazon adopted a test-of-certification posture, but in what it enables. Amazon can now petition a federal Circuit Court to review the Board’s order, and in doing so, challenge the validity of the April 2022 election on the merits. Amazon has publicly signaled that it intends to do exactly that, arguing that the election was fundamentally flawed and that the Board’s regional office improperly influenced the outcome.

The appellate battle will likely center on Amazon’s objections to the conduct of the election, including claims related to the Board’s handling of the voting process and the ALU’s electioneering tactics. The Circuit Court will review the Board’s factual findings under a substantial evidence standard, but questions of law, including the Board’s application of its own election rules, will receive closer scrutiny.

Takeaways for Employers

The test-of-certification route remains the primary path to judicial review, but it is not cost-free. Amazon’s refusal to bargain triggered an extension of the certification year, meaning the ALU-IBT’s protected status as bargaining representative will be prolonged. Employers that adopt this strategy should understand that the clock does not run in their favor while the appeal is pending.

Election objections must be thoroughly developed in the representation proceeding. The Board will not entertain new arguments or evidence in a subsequent 8(a)(5) case. Amazon marshaled its objections extensively in the representation proceeding, which is precisely the right approach — any employer that fails to do so will find the courthouse door effectively closed.

Union affiliations do not reset the bargaining obligation. The ALU’s decision to affiliate with the Teamsters did not give Amazon a new basis to refuse recognition. Employers facing a similar situation, where an independent union affiliates with an established international, should not assume the affiliation creates a viable defense to a bargaining demand.

High-profile organizing campaigns generate sustained Board scrutiny. The JFK8 campaign attracted extraordinary public attention, and the Board’s handling of the case reflects the significance the agency attaches to it. Employers in similar situations should anticipate that the Board will move deliberately and that any procedural missteps by the employer will be carefully examined.

NLRB Clarifies That Cemex Framework Does Not Impose a Filing Deadline for RM Petitions

By Adam Keating

In a decision issued on March 25, 2026, the National Labor Relations Board provided important guidance on the scope of its 2023 Cemex Construction Materials Pacific LLC decision, holding that the framework established in that case does not create an enforceable deadline for employers to file petitions for representation elections. The ruling, issued in St. John’s College, Case 28-RM-337949, offers welcome clarity on an issue that has generated significant uncertainty among employers since Cemex was decided.

Background: The Cemex Framework

As many employers are now aware, the Board’s 2023 Cemex decision marked a significant shift in labor law by establishing a new framework governing employer responses to union demands for recognition. Under Cemex, when a union presents an employer with a demand for recognition supported by evidence of majority support among the relevant workforce, the employer has two options: voluntarily recognize the union, or “promptly” file a petition for an election — referred to as an RM petition in Board parlance. If the employer fails to act promptly, or if it commits unfair labor practices that undermine the election process, the Board may impose a bargaining order requiring the employer to recognize and bargain with the union without an election.

The Cemex decision indicated that “promptly” would ordinarily mean within approximately two weeks of the union’s recognition demand. Since its issuance, the decision has led to a notable increase in employer-filed RM petitions, as employers have sought to avail themselves of the election option rather than accede to voluntary recognition.

One significant area of ambiguity, however, has been whether the two-week guideline constituted a hard-and-fast filing deadline — and, if so, what consequences would attach to a late filing at the representation case stage.

The St. John’s College Decision

The St. John’s College case presented this question directly. The matter arose when the Communications Workers of America demanded recognition as the representative of a unit of graduate and undergraduate workers at St. John’s College. The college subsequently filed an RM petition, but a regional director dismissed the petition on the ground that it had not been filed within the timeframe contemplated by Cemex.

The Board reversed the regional director’s dismissal. In doing so, the Board held that Cemex did not modify the existing procedural rules governing the processing of representation petitions. Regional directors, the Board explained, should evaluate and process RM petitions under the established representation case procedures, without applying Cemex‘s timeliness language as a basis for dismissal.

The Board drew a clear distinction between the representation case process and the unfair labor practice process. As the Board stated, “The question of whether, within the meaning of Cemex, an RM petition was ‘promptly’ filed or whether ‘unforeseen circumstances’ excuse a later filing are properly left to unfair labor practice proceedings.” In other words, the timeliness of an employer’s RM petition filing is relevant only in the context of a subsequent unfair labor practice proceeding — not as a threshold barrier to the petition being processed.

Key Takeaways for Employers

This decision carries several practical implications for employers navigating the Cemex landscape.

First, employers should understand that an RM petition will not be dismissed at the representation case stage solely because it was filed outside the approximate two-week window referenced in Cemex. Regional directors will process such petitions under the Board’s standard procedures.

Second, however, employers should not interpret this ruling as eliminating the importance of acting promptly. The timeliness of an RM petition filing remains a relevant consideration in unfair labor practice proceedings. An employer that delays filing may still face exposure to a Cemex bargaining order if the Board later determines, in an unfair labor practice case, that the petition was not filed promptly and the employer engaged in conduct that undermined the election process.

Third, the decision underscores the importance of having a well-prepared response plan in place before a union demand for recognition arrives. Employers that are prepared to act quickly when confronted with a recognition demand will be best positioned to preserve their right to an election while minimizing the risk of a Cemex bargaining order.

We will continue to monitor developments in this area as the Board and the courts further refine the contours of the Cemex framework. Employers with questions about how these developments may affect their operations should consult with experienced labor counsel.

This Blog Post has been prepared for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, and the receipt of it does not constitute, a lawyer-client relationship.

© 2009- Duane Morris LLP. Duane Morris is a registered service mark of Duane Morris LLP.

The opinions expressed on this blog are those of the author and are not to be construed as legal advice.

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