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Posted by: Karla Campbell on Apr 28, 2026

Nearly three years ago, in the Fall 2023 TBA Labor & Employment Connect newsletter, I wrote an article about a then-recent decision from the National Labor Relations Board — Cemex Construction Materials Pacific LLC — that had the potential to dramatically change the landscape of union organizing in workplaces across the country.[1] In Cemex, the board adopted a new standard that encourages employers to recognize and bargain with its employees’ chosen representative without an election by shifting the burden of filing an election petition from the employees to the employer. In doing so, the decision added another tool in the board’s toolbox of remedies to fix the damage done by an employer’s unlawful influence on employees ahead of a unionization election — an order to recognize and bargain with the union even without an election. At the end of that article, I queried how Cemex might impact workplace organizing in practice. Well, dear reader, we now have an answer to that burning question. On March 6, the 6th Circuit issued a decision abrogating the Cemex decision in Brown-Forman Corp. v. NLRB.[2]

In Brown-Forman, the court took issue with the Cemex decision because it set out to establish a new legal standard, rather than resolve the parties’ dispute that was before the board. That, the panel of the 6th Circuit held, was tantamount to creating new law, a power the agency simply did not have. “Thus, because the way in which the Board created the Cemex standard constituted an improper exercise of its statutory authority, the Cemex bargaining order standard is invalid.” [3]

Without Cemex, at least in the 6th Circuit, the same dilemma that the board sought to resolve remains, namely, how to ensure fair representation elections, a right guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Act, when employers take unlawful actions to taint those elections. Finding a solution will fall to a new board now. After nearly a year without a quorum, the five-member board now has three members (a holdover Biden appointee, David Prouty, and two recent Trump appointees, James Murphy and Scott Mayer), as well as newly installed General Counsel Crystal Carey — a position akin to the board’s prosecutor — who was sworn in on Jan. 7.

The general counsel typically sets the board’s policy agenda, which would include the new board’s position on remedies in representation elections. Most labor practitioners expected Carey to advance a position contrary to Cemex. However, Carey has stated that her first priority is tackling the huge backlog of cases pending before the board. Everyone agrees that substantial processing times have hamstrung the board. Official figures put the current processing time for an unfair labor practice charge at upwards of 450 days.  Anecdotally, I think that number is low. The reality is that an employee who suffers harm from an employer’s unfair labor practice, and files a charge with the board, might be awarded relief three, four, or even five years later, a devastating prospect for most workers.

While Carey’s goal of reducing the board’s backlog is certainly laudable, her method for achieving that goal has come as a surprise. The general counsel’s office has instructed board agents, through formal memoranda, to require the charging party to present substantial evidence supporting the ULP charge within two weeks of filing. Otherwise, the charge will be dismissed. In other words, the plan is to reduce the backlog of unresolved charges by dismissing them. This is a sea change for the board, which is, at its core, an investigatory agency. Most ULP charges are filed by statutory employees without the aid of legal representation. Board agents receiving those charges act as investigators, gathering evidence from both the charging party and charged party. Carey’s guidance, however, undercuts this investigatory role, forcing that burden on unrepresented workers. What does the board do when it no longer investigates violations of the National Labor Relations Act? It shrugs.

The situation facing the board is dire. It lacks the staffing and other resources to effectively investigate charges, and it lacks the legal remedies to provide adequate relief for violations of the act. The board’s dire situation cripples enforcement of the act across the country. That is because the act grants exclusive jurisdiction over representation proceedings, i.e., union elections, and unfair labor practice claims — the key statutory rights granted employees by the act – to the board.[4] A number of proposals are being debated currently to replace the board’s exclusive jurisdiction over the act with concurrent federal or state court jurisdiction or even jurisdiction in a newly created Article I court or other agency. Once again, I find myself concluding an article in this newsletter by querying how these happenings at the board might impact workplace organizing in practice. The end of Cemex remedies is a big development, even though the decision was around for only a few years. The end of the board, after 91 years of existence, would be even bigger.


Karla Campbell practices employment law, in particular ERISA, and traditional labor law at Stranch Jennings & Garvey in Nashville. She is a long-time member of the AFL-CIO’s Union Lawyers’ Alliance and a frequent speaker on labor law topics. 


[1] 372 NLRB No. 130 (2023)

[2] Nos. 24-2107/25-1060, -- F.4th --, 2026 WL 632679 (6th Cir. Mar. 6, 2026)

[3]Brown-Forman, at *18.

[4] 29 U.S.C. §§ 159(c), 160(a).

Posted by: Bethany Wilson on Apr 28, 2026

In November 2025, the 6th Circuit issued its opinion in Gray v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, reversing the lower court’s denial of summary judgment to the employer.[1]

Background

Monica Gray helped a colleague secure an accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), in the face of opposition from the colleague’s supervisor, Joe Kyle.[2] A few months later, Kyle reported Gray to HR for timecard falsification while he was filling in for her regular manager, who was on vacation at the time. State Farm’s Human Resources investigated Kyle’s report and ultimately fired Gray for various instances of confirmed timecard falsification. HR found that Gray had falsified several timecards in addition to the one reported by Kyle. Furthermore, Gray occasionally manually changed her timecards to state she was working when she was not even in the building.

After her termination, Gray filed suit, alleging that Kyle retaliated against her — by singling her out for conduct that was widespread at State Farm — because she had helped her colleague advocate for an ADA accommodation. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio granted summary judgment to State Farm on the basis of the honest belief rule. The 6th Circuit reversed summary judgment, finding that Gray can proceed on a theory of vicarious liability based on Kyle’s alleged bias. Judge Bloomekatz delivered the opinion in which Judge Gilman concurred. Judge Readler offered an unyielding, lengthy dissent based on the party presentation principle.

The Court’s Analysis

The court began by confirming that Gray had presented sufficient evidence of a prima facie case of retaliation.[3] In doing so, the court specifically highlighted that the assistance Gray provided to her co-worker in seeking an ADA accommodation qualified as protected activity under the ADA. The court further noted that there was a triable question regarding causation,[4] as Gray had proffered evidence that Kyle subjected her to particular scrutiny for commonplace behavior shortly after this protected activity.

Having found that Gray had shown triable issues of fact as to a prima facie case of retaliation, the court then articulated that State Farm had a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for terminating Gray — her timecard falsification.[5] The court then swiftly disposed of Gray’s claim of direct liability against State Farm, finding that she had failed to call into question State Farm’s stated reason for firing her.[6]

However, much to the dissent’s consternation, the court does not stop there. Rather it then goes on to say “[b]ut Gray also seeks to hold State Farm vicariously liable for Kyle’s actions. She argues that Kyle reported her for retaliatory reasons and that his report influenced State Farm’s decision to fire her.”[7] The court then highlights that it has previously upheld retaliation claims when the plaintiff was singled out for adverse treatment. It also agrees that Gray “has enough evidence of differential scrutiny to raise a material dispute over Kyle’s motives.”[8]

In particular, the court noted that Gray had provided evidence that one of her teammates had “nearly identical discrepancies” in her timecards.[9] However, Kyle did not report that teammate’s timecards to HR, despite the fact that he “undisputedly knew about [the teammate’s] timecard discrepancies at the time he reported Gray.”[10] State Farm attempted to argue that this teammate’s timecard discrepancies were not “virtually identical conduct” as required of a comparator because Gray, unlike her teammate, occasionally claimed to have been working when she was not even in the building.[11]

However, the court stated that this difference between Gray’s conduct and that of her teammate only became apparent after Kyle had reported Gray to HR and thus could not sanitize the biased nature of Kyle’s report. The court further notes that Gray pointed to other employees who spent time socializing or visiting in the cafeteria while clocked in. The court was unconvinced by State Farm’s attempt to characterize these workers’ conduct as a “performance” issue distinct from Gray’s “falsification” issue.[12] Based on these particular facts, the court found that Gray had raised a genuine dispute over Kyle’s motives for reporting her sufficient to survive summary judgment on the question of pretext.[13]

State Farm attempted to argue that Kyle’s motives for reporting Gray could not be imputed to the decisionmakers who ultimately chose to terminate her for her timecard falsification, as confirmed by an independent HR investigation. However, the court found that the company “remains liable even if it relied only partially on the supervisor’s ‘biased report’” in reaching the adverse decision.[14] Further, the court noted that this remains true even if Kyle “honestly believed” the truth of his allegations. More specifically, the court stated, “But a supervisor does not have to lie in order to be biased. As we have repeatedly recognized, a supervisor can cause an employee’s termination by reporting true yet selective information.”[15] 

State Farm then tried to argue that it couldn’t be liable even if Kyle’s report was biased because it confirmed his allegations in an independent investigation. The court rejected this premise, however, stating that “employers cannot avoid liability simply because they independently confirm the substance of a selective report.”[16] The court further noted that “when a supervisor reports true but selective information, an investigation will always confirm the supervisor’s allegation.”[17] One particularly troublesome fact for State Farm in this analysis was that Gray had told HR during the investigation that she believed Kyle had targeted her because she assisted a co-worker in seeking an ADA accommodation. Despite this “State Farm made no effort to determine whether Kyle had singled Gray out for retaliatory reasons ... [A] jury could conclude that State Farm acted as a quintessential ‘conduit’ of Kyle’s bias.”[18]

In sum, the court articulated that “a subsequent investigation that does nothing more than confirm a supervisor’s true-but-selective report is by itself insufficient to break the chain of proximate cause.” However, “[a]n employer can still negate causation by establishing that the employer’s investigation resulted in an adverse action for reasons unrelated to the supervisor’s original biased action.”[19]

Ultimately, the court highlighted that “[a] jury could conclude that State Farm would not have investigated and eventually fired Gray had Kyle not reported her.”[20] Accordingly, the court reversed the lower court’s grant of summary judgment.

Moving Forward

Gray firmly announces that employers cannot avoid liability by relying on independent investigation and confirmation of the substance of an otherwise selective report. With this in mind, employers should be careful to fashion investigations into employee misconduct to determine whether the supervisor made the report selectively or for an impermissible reason.


Bethany Westcott Wilson is an associate of Kramer Rayson LLP in Knoxville, Tennessee, where she practices labor and employment law, focusing on complex federal and state leave law issues. She graduated from Lee University in 2017 and The University of Tennessee (now Winston) College of Law in 2024.


[1] Gray v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 159 F.4th 1024 (6th Cir. 2025).

[2] Id. at 1029–30.

[3] Id. at 12032–33.

[4] Id. at 1033–34.

[5] Id. at 1034.

[6] Id. at 1034–35.

[7] Id. at 1035.

[8] Id.

[9] Id.

[10] Id. at 1036.

[11] Id.

[12] Id.

[13] Id. at 1037.

[14] Id.

[15] Id.

[16] Id. at 1038.

[17] Id.

[18] Id.

[19] Id. at 1039 (citation modified).

[20] Id. at 1040.

Posted by: Jarod Word on Apr 28, 2026

Conservation easements provide estate planners with a powerful, tax-advantaged tool to help clients preserve family land, reduce estate burdens and create lasting legacies. This free webinar, hosted by the TBA Estate Planning Section, will walk through the legal framework, attorney checklist and real-world application of conservation easements designed to enhance legal practice and deliver meaningful client outcomes. Join Foothills Land Conservancy Executive Director Mark Stevans on May 7 from noon to 1 p.m. CDT for a session on how to integrate these easements into estate planning strategies. Learn more and register here.

Posted by: Jarod Word on Apr 28, 2026

Effective July 1, lawyers will have to comply with new redaction rules for filings in Tennessee’s appellate courts. The TBA Appellate Practice Section will host a free webinar on the new rules and how they will significantly change the process for writing and filing briefs with the Tennessee Court of Appeals, Court of Criminal Appeals and Supreme Court. Appellate practitioners Jacob Vanzin, Ben Raybin and William Gill will explore the rules and offer a primer on how to comply with the new requirements. One hour of general CLE credit is available for a $50 processing fee. Learn more and register here.

Posted by: Laura Labenberg on Apr 28, 2026

The National Jurist’s preLaw magazine recently released its rankings of the best law school buildings, according to Above the Law. The rankings evaluate structures not just for their visual appeal but also for how effectively they support student learning, collaboration and career preparation. Notably, the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law ranked second on this year’s list. The rankings are based on a comprehensive methodology that considers several key factors: aesthetics (50%), square footage per student (10%), library hours and seating capacity per student (15%), amenities such as dining, fitness facilities and lockers (15%) and additional elements including parking, sustainability and other features (10%). Read the full article from preLaw..

Posted by: Laura Labenberg on Apr 28, 2026

The National Jurist reports that AccessLex has updated its free student loan calculator to reflect the upcoming changes to the student loan and repayment landscape under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Accurate information is critical as borrowers navigate an evolving student loan landscape, and these enhancements provide law students with a clear, comprehensive view of their borrowing and repayment options — empowering them to plan with confidence, according to AccessLex.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Apr 27, 2026
Posted by: Azya Thornton on Apr 27, 2026

ANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge. Jaylen Simpson was convicted of carjacking resulting in serious bodily injury, as well as using, carrying, and discharging a firearm during the carjacking. During jury selection, Simpson pleaded guilty. He argues on appeal that the district court erred by declining to apply a two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility and, separately, by giving excessive weight to the nature and circumstances of the offense at sentencing. Finding these arguments unpersuasive, we AFFIRM.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Apr 27, 2026

A Maury County jury convicted the Defendant, Arvel Joshua Terry, of domestic assault. The trial court sentenced him to a term of eleven months and twenty-nine days, which was suspended after service of 120 days in custody. On appeal, the Defendant raises two issues: (1) whether the evidence is legally sufficient to support his conviction for domestic assault; and (2) whether the trial court improperly denied defense counsel the opportunity to refresh a witness’s recollection. Upon our review, we respectfully affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Apr 27, 2026

The Petitioner, Christopher Thomas Thompson, appeals from the Weakley County Circuit Court’s denial of his petition for post-conviction relief. On appeal, the Petitioner argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel due to trial counsel’s failure to develop a defense strategy or otherwise investigate possible defenses and that his guilty plea was involuntary. Discerning no error, we affirm.


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