Congress should boost NLRB funding to protect workers’ well-being

Congress should boost NLRB funding to protect workers’ well-being

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The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) enforces the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), the nation’s fundamental labor law that guarantees most private-sector workers the right to organize and the right to collective bargaining. Years of static funding has undermined the Board’s ability to fulfill its statutory mission, to the detriment of workers and the economy. The chronic under-resourcing of the Board has created challenges in its enforcement capacity amid the surge of union interest—and unfair labor practices. As Congress debates upcoming budget and spending legislation , it is critical that lawmakers boost NLRB funding to protect workers’ well-being.

NLRB funding has remained flat

The Board’s staffing level has not kept up with the growth in the national private-sector workforce. The number of full-time employees at the NLRB dropped by nearly 31% from 1,789 to 1,320 between 2006 and 2019. During the same period, the number of covered workers per NLRB staff increased by 50%, from one full-time employee per 74,809 workers to one full-time employee per 112,201 workers, as shown in the figure below. Further, staffing levels at regional offices, which typically handle the intake of complaints filed by workers, dropped by 33% between 2010 and 2019.

The National Labor Relations Board is now responsible for far more workers than it was a decade ago: Number of private-sector workers per NLRB full-time employee, 2006–2019

Fiscal year Private-sector workers per NLRB full-time employee
2006 74809
2007 78292
2008 82804
2009 80784
2010 78321
2011 77076
2012 80303
2013 83888
2014 84853
2015 87896
2016 92969
2017 98064
2018 110790
2019 112201
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.