Answer:
The Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan represented attempts by the United States to deal with what threat? ... Carry out the United States policy of preventing the spread of communism.
Answer:
After employees choose a union as a bargaining representative, the employer and union are required to meet at reasonable times to bargain in good faith about wages, hours, vacation time, insurance, safety practices and other mandatory subjects. Some managerial decisions such as subcontracting, relocation, and other operational changes may not be mandatory subjects of bargaining, but the employer must bargain about the decision's effects on unit employees.
It is an unfair labor practice for either party to refuse to bargain collectively with the other, but parties are not compelled to reach agreement or make concessions.
If after sufficient good faith efforts, no agreement can be reached, the employer may declare impasse, and then implement the last offer presented to the union. However, the union may disagree that true impasse has been reached and file a charge of an unfair labor practice for failure to bargain in good faith. The NLRB will determine whether true impasse was reached based on the history of negotiations and the understandings of both parties.
If the Agency finds that impasse was not reached, the employer will be asked to return to the bargaining table. In an extreme case, the NLRB may seek a federal court order to force the employer to bargain.
The parties' obligations do not end when the contract expires. They must bargain in good faith for a successor contract, or for the termination of the agreement, while terms of the expired contract continue.
Explanation:
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The answer is federal law has more authority then the state.
Answer:
They were important because they held vital transport links and were important for the economy.
Explanation:
The Union believed that these non-participatory States were important due to a number of reasons. Firstly, they were large land holdings which were important for the economy of the union. Apart from that, they served as very important transport links for both export and import of goods.
Both the Union and the Confederacy believed that these States were important.