HJRES 98 · 118th Congress · Labor and Employment

Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the National Labor Relations Board relating to "Standard for Determining Joint Employer Status".

Introduced 2023-11-09· Sponsored by Rep. James, John [R-MI-10]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
3
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: The Chair directed the Clerk to notify the Senate of the action of the House.(2024-05-07)

Recorded Votes

FailedHouse · 2024-05-07
Roll #185
Yea 214Nay 191
Democrats
9 Yea·191 Nay
Republicans
205 Yea·0 Nay
FailedHouse · 2024-05-07
Roll #185
Yea 214Nay 191
Democrats
9 Yea·191 Nay
Republicans
205 Yea·0 Nay
PassedSenate · 2024-04-10
Roll #122
Yea 50Nay 48
PassedSenate · 2024-04-10
Roll #122
Yea 50Nay 48

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Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] This joint resolution nullifies the final rule issued by the National Labor Relations Board titled Standard for Determining Joint Employer Status and published on October 27, 2023. The rule establishes a new joint employer standard for determining whether two employers simultaneously employ a particular employee or employees. Under the rule, an entity may be considered a joint employer of another employer's employees if the two share or codetermine the employees' essential terms and conditions of employment. The rule is currently scheduled to take effect on February 26, 2024.  …

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.J. Res. 98, a joint resolution providing for Congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the National Labor Relations Board relating to “Standard for Determining Joint Employer Status”

Jan 9, 2024

As reported by the House Committee on Education and the Workforce on January 3, 2024

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (20)

20 Republicans