RULE I : Definition of Terms

SECTION 1. Definition of terms. —

(a) "Commission" means the National Labor Relations Commission.

(b) "Bureau" means the Bureau of Labor Relations and/or the Industrial Relations Division in the Regional Offices of the Department of Labor and Employment.

(c) "Board" means the National Conciliation and Mediation Board.

(d) "Code" means the Labor Code of the Philippines, as amended.

(e) "Employer" includes any person acting in the interest of an employer, directly or indirectly. The term shall not include any labor organization or any of its officers or agents except when acting as employer.

(f) "Employee" includes any person in the employ of a particular employer. The term shall not be limited to the employees of a particular employer, unless the Code so explicitly states. It shall include any individual whose work has ceased as a result of or in connection with any current labor dispute or because of any unfair labor practice if he has not obtained any other substantially equivalent and regular employment.

(g) "Labor Organization" means any union or association of employees which exists in whole or in part for the purpose of collective bargaining or of dealing with employers concerning terms and conditions of employment.

(h) "Local Union" means any labor organization operating at the enterprise level.

(i) "National Union/Federation" means any labor organization with at least ten (10) locals or chapters each of which must be a duly recognized collective bargaining agent.

(j) "Legitimate Labor Organization" means any labor organization duly registered with the Department of Labor and Employment and includes any branch, local or affiliate thereof.

(k) "Company Union" means any labor organization whose formation, function or administration has been assisted by any act defined as unfair labor practice by the Code.

(l) "Bargaining Representative" means a legitimate labor organization or any duly authorized officer or agent of such organization whether or not employed by the employer.

(m) "Unfair Labor Practice" means any unfair labor practice as expressly defined in the Code.

(n) "Labor or Industrial Dispute" includes any controversy or matter concerning terms or conditions of employment or the association or representation of persons in negotiating the fixing, maintaining, changing or arranging of terms and conditions of employment regardless of whether or not the disputants stand in the proximate relationship of employers and employees.

(o) "Managerial Employee" is one who is vested with powers or prerogatives to lay down and execute management policies and/or to hire, transfer, suspend, layoff, recall, discharge, assign or discipline employees. Supervisory employees are those who, in the interest of the employer, effectively recommend such managerial actions if the exercise of such authority is not merely routinary or clerical in nature but require the use of independent judgment. All employees not falling within any of the above definitions are considered rank-and-file employees for purposes of this Book.

(p) "Voluntary Arbitrator" means any person accredited by the Board as such, or any person named or designated in the collective bargaining agreement, by the parties to act as their voluntary arbitrator, or one chosen, with or without the assistance of the National Conciliation and Mediation Board, pursuant to a selection procedure agreed upon in the collective bargaining agreement, or any official that may be authorized by the Secretary of Labor and Employment to act as voluntary arbitrator upon the written request and agreement of the parties to a labor dispute.

(q) "Strike" means any temporary stoppage of work by the concerted action of employees as a result of a labor or industrial dispute.

(r) "Strike-Breaker" means any person who obstructs, impedes, or interferes with by force, violence, coercion, threats or intimidation any peaceful picketing by employees during any labor controversy affecting wages, hours or conditions of work or in the exercise of the right of self-organization or collective bargaining.

(s) "Strike Area" means the establishment, warehouse, depots, plants or offices, including the sites or premises used as run-away shops, of the employer struck against, as well as the immediate vicinity actually used by picketing strikers in moving to and fro before all points of entrance to and exits from said establishment.

(t) "Lockout" means the temporary refusal of an employer to furnish work as a result of a labor or industry dispute.

(u) "Internal Union Dispute" includes all disputes or grievances arising from any violation of or disagreement over any provision of the constitution and by-laws of a union, including any violation of the rights and conditions of union membership provided for in this Code.

(v) "Appeal" means the elevation by an aggrieved party of any decision, order or award of a lower body to a higher body, by means of a pleading which includes the assignment of errors, memorandum of arguments in support thereof, and the reliefs prayed for. A mere notice of appeal, therefore, does not constitute the appeal as herein defined and understood, and shall not stop the running of the period for perfecting an appeal.

(w) "Perfection of an Appeal" includes the filing within the prescribed period, of the memorandum of appeal containing, among others, the assignment of error/s, the argument in support thereof, the reliefs sought and posting of the appeal bond.

(x) "Certification Election" means the process of determining, through secret ballot, the sole and exclusive bargaining agent of the employees in an appropriate bargaining unit, for purposes of collective bargaining.

(y) "Consent Election" means the election voluntarily agreed upon by the parties to determine the issue of majority representation of all the workers in the appropriate collective bargaining unit.

(z) "Run-Off" refers to an election between the labor unions receiving the two (2) higher number of voters when a certification election which provides for three (3) or more choices results in no choice receiving a majority of the valid votes cast, where the total number of votes for all contending unions is at least fifty percent (50%) of the number of votes cast.

(aa) "Registration of Agreement" refers to the filing of the collective bargaining agreement with the Regional Office or the Bureau accompanied by verified proof of posting and ratification and payment of fee.

(bb) "Organized Establishment" refers to a firm or company where there is a recognized or certified exclusive bargaining agent.

(cc) "Registration Proceedings" refer to proceedings involving the application for registration of labor organizations.

(dd) "Cancellation Proceeding" is the process leading to the revocation of the registration certificate of a labor organization after due process.

(ee) "Hearing Officers" are officers appointed/designated in the Regional Office and authorized to hear and decide cases under Section 2 of Republic Act No. 6715 and whose decision is appealable to the Commission.

(ff) "Union Accounts Examiners" are officials in the Bureau or the Industrial Relations Division in the Regional Office empowered to audit books of accounts of the union.

(gg) "Representation Officer" refer to a person duly authorized to conduct and supervise certification elections in accordance with Rule VI of this Book.

(hh) "Term of Office" means the tenure of office of elected officials of a labor organization which is for a fixed period of five (5) years.

(ii) "Cabo" refers to a person or group or persons or to a labor group which, in the guise of a labor organization, supplies workers to an employer, with or without any monetary or other consideration whether in the capacity of an agent of the employer or as an ostensible independent contractor.

(jj) "Collective Bargaining Agreement" refers to the negotiated contract between a legitimate labor organization and the employer concerning wages, hours of work and all other terms and conditions of employment in a bargaining unit, including mandatory provisions for grievances and arbitration machineries.

(kk) "Med-Arbiter" is an official in the Regional Office authorized to hear, conciliate, mediate and decide representation cases, internal union and inter-union disputes.

(ll) "Administrator" refers to the Administrator of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration or the National Conciliation and Mediation Board as the context so indicates.

RULE II : Registration of Unions

SECTION 1. Who may join unions. — All persons employed in commercial, industrial and agricultural enterprises, including employees of government corporations established under the Corporation Code as well as employees of religious, medical or educational institutions whether operating for profit or not, except managerial employees, shall have the right to self-organization and to form, join or assist labor organizations for purposes of collective bargaining. Ambulant, intermittent and itinerant workers, self-employed people, rural workers and those without any definite employers may form labor organizations for their mutual aid and protection.

Supervisory employees and security guards shall not be eligible for membership in a labor organization of the rank-and-file employees but may join, assist or form separate labor organizations of their own; Provided, that those supervisory employees who are included in an existing rank-and-file bargaining unit, upon the effectivity of Republic Act No. 6715, shall remain in that unit; Provided, further, that alien employees with valid working permits issued by the Department of Labor and Employment may exercise the right to self-organization and join or assist labor organizations for purposes of collective bargaining if they are nationals of a country which grants the same or similar rights to Filipino workers, as certified by the Department of Foreign Affairs.

For the purpose of this Section, any employee, whether employed for a definite period or not, shall, beginning on the first day of his service, be eligible for membership in the union.

SECTION 2. Where to file application; procedure. — Any national labor organization or labor federation or local union may file an application for registration with the Bureau or the Regional Office where the applicant's principal office is located. The Bureau or the Regional Office shall immediately process and approve or deny the application. In case of approval, the Bureau or the Regional Office shall issue the registration certificate within thirty (30) calendar days from receipt of the application, together with all the requirements for registration as hereinafter provided.

SECTION 3. Union affiliation; direct membership with national union. — An affiliate of a labor federation or national union may be a local or chapter thereof or an independently registered union.

(a) The labor federation or national union concerned shall issue a charter certificate indicating the creation or establishment of a local or chapter, copy of which shall be submitted to the Bureau of Labor Relations within thirty (30) days from issuance of such charter certificate.

(b) An independently registered union shall be considered an affiliate of a labor federation or national union after submission to the Bureau of the contract or agreement of affiliation within thirty (30) days after its execution.

(c) All existing labor federations or national unions are required to submit a list of all their affiliates, their addresses and including the names and addresses of their respective officials, to the Bureau within thirty (30) days from effectivity of these Rules.

(d) All existing labor federations or national unions with direct members are required to organize said members into locals or chapters in their respective companies or establishments within sixty (60) days from effectivity of these Rules.

(e) The local or chapter of a labor federation or national union shall have and maintain constitution and by-laws, set of officers and books of accounts. For reporting purposes, the procedure governing the reporting of independently registered unions, federations or national unions shall be observed.

(f) No person who is not an employee or worker of the company or establishment where an independently registered union, affiliate, local or chapter of a labor federation or national union operates shall henceforth be elected or appointed as an officer of such union, affiliate, local or chapter.

SECTION 4. Requirements for registration of local unions; applications. — The application for registration of a local union shall be signed by at least twenty percent (20%) of the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit which the applicant union seeks to represent, and shall be accompanied by the following:

(a) Fifty-peso registration fee;

(b) The names of its officers, their addresses, the principal address of the labor organization, the minutes of the organizational meetings and the list of the workers who participated in such meetings;

(c) The names of all its members and the number of employees in the bargaining unit;

(d) If the applicant union has been in existence for one or more years, copies of its annual financial reports;

(e) Four copies of its constitution and by-laws, minutes of its adoption or ratification, and the list of the members who participated in it;

(f) A sworn statement by the applicant union that there is no certified bargaining agent in the bargaining unit concerned. In case where there is an existing collective bargaining agreement duly submitted to the Department of Labor and Employment, a sworn statement that the application for registration is filed during the last sixty (60) days of the agreement; and

(g) The application for registration and all the accompanying documents shall be verified under oath by the secretary or the treasurer, as the case may be, and attested to by the president.

SECTION 5. Denial of registration of local unions. — The Regional Office of the Bureau may deny the application for registration on grounds of non-compliance with the requirements enumerated in Section 4 hereof.

The decision of the Regional Office or the Bureau denying the application for registration shall be in writing, stating in clear terms the reasons therefor. A copy thereof shall be furnished the applicant union.

SECTION 6. Appeal. — Any applicant union may appeal to the Bureau the denial of registration by the Regional Office, or to the Secretary if the denial is by the Bureau, within ten (10) calendar days from receipt of such decision on grounds of:

(a) Grave abuse of discretion; and

(b) Gross incompetence.

The appeal shall be filed in the Regional Office/Bureau which shall cause the transmittal of the records to the Bureau/Secretary within five (5) calendar days from receipt of the appeal.

The Bureau/Secretary shall decide the appeal within twenty (20) calendar days from receipt of the records of the case.

SECTION 7. Cancellation of registration certificate. — The certificate of registration of any legitimate labor organization including labor federations or national unions may be cancelled by the Bureau or the Regional Office on any of the following grounds:

(a) Violation of Articles 234, 237 and 239 of the Code;

(b) Failure to comply with Article 238 of the Code; and

(c) Violation of any of the provisions of Article 241 of the Code.

SECTION 8. Notice of Cancellation. — The Bureau or the Regional Office shall serve a notice of the cancellation proceedings on the labor organization concerned stating the grounds therefor, at least fifteen (15) calendar days before the scheduled date of hearing. In such hearing, the representative of the labor organization shall have the right to present its side.

SECTION 9. Appeal. — The labor organization may, unless the law provides otherwise, within fifteen (15) calendar days from receipt of the decision cancelling or revoking its certificate of registration, file an appeal to the Bureau, or in case of cancellation by the Bureau, to the Secretary, on any of the following grounds:

(a) Grave abuse of discretion; and

(b) Gross incompetence.

The Bureau/Secretary shall have fifteen (15) calendar days from receipt of the records of the case within which to decide the appeal. The decision shall be final and unappealable.

SECTION 10. Rights of labor organizations. — A legitimate labor organization shall have the rights enumerated in Article 242 of the Code.

SECTION 11. Automatic cancellation of union registration. — (a) The Bureau or the Regional Office shall, after due process, cancel the certificate of registration of any labor organization which fails to submit the financial reports required by the Code and its Implementing Rules six (6) months after the effectivity of Republic Act No. 6715.

(b) The reports required under this section shall be submitted to the Bureau or the Regional Office.

RULE III : Restructuring

(Repealed by EO 111)

RULE IV : Equity of the Incumbent

(Repealed by EO 111)

RULE V : Representation Cases and Internal-Union Disputes

SECTION 1. Where to file. — A petition for certification election shall be filed with the Regional Office which has jurisdiction over the principal office of the petitioner. The petition shall be in writing and under oath.

SECTION 2. Who may file. — Any legitimate labor organization or the employer, when requested to bargain collectively, may file the petition.

The petition, when filed by a legitimate labor organization shall contain, among others:

(a) The name of petitioner and its address and affiliation, if any;

(b) Name, address and nature of the employer's business;

(c) Description of the bargaining unit which shall be the employer unit unless circumstances otherwise require; and provided further, that the appropriate bargaining unit of the rank-and-file employees shall not include supervisory employees and/or security guards;

(d) Appropriate number of the employees in the alleged bargaining unit;

(e) Names and addresses of other legitimate labor organizations in the bargaining unit;

(f) In an organized establishment, the signatures of at least twenty-five (25%) percent of all employees in the appropriate bargaining unit; and

(g) Other relevant facts.

When the petition is filed by an employer, it shall contain, among others:

(a) The name, address and general nature of the employer's business;

(b) Names and addresses of the legitimate labor organizations involved;

(c) Approximate number of the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit;

(d) Description of the bargaining unit which shall be the employer unit unless circumstances otherwise required; and provided further, that the appropriate bargaining unit of the rank-and-file employees shall not include supervisory employees and/or security guards;

(e) Other relevant facts.

SECTION 3. When to file. — In the absence of a collective bargaining agreement duly registered in accordance with Article 231 of the Code, a petition for certification election may be filed at any time. However, no certification election may be held within one year from the date of issuance of a final certification election result. Neither may a representation question be entertained if, before the filing of a petition for certification election, a bargaining deadlock to which an incumbent or certified bargaining agent is a party had been submitted to conciliation or arbitration or had become the subject of a valid notice of strike or lockout.

If a collective bargaining agreement has been duly registered in accordance with Article 231 of the Code, a petition for certification election or a motion for intervention can only be entertained within sixty (60) days prior to the expiry date of such agreement.

SECTION 4. Effects of early agreements. — The representation case shall not, however, be adversely affected by a collective bargaining agreement registered before or during the last sixty (60) days of a subsisting agreement or during the pendency of the representation case.

SECTION 5. Where to file motion for intervention. — The motion for intervention in certification election proceedings shall be filed before the Med-Arbiter assigned to the case. The mere filing of said motion, however, will not suspend the holding of the certification election without an order issued by the Med-Arbiter.

SECTION 6. Procedure. — Upon receipt of a petition, the Regional Director shall assign the case to a Med-Arbiter for appropriate action. The Med-Arbiter, upon receipt of the assigned petition, shall have twenty (20) working days from submission of the case for resolution within which to dismiss or grant the petition.

In a petition filed by a legitimate organization involving an unorganized establishment, the Med-Arbiter shall immediately order the conduct of a certification election.

In a petition involving an organized establishment or enterprise where the majority status of the incumbent collective bargaining union is questioned through a verified petition by a legitimate labor organization, the Med-Arbiter shall immediately order the certification election by secret ballot if the petition is filed during the last sixty (60) days of the collective bargaining agreement and supported by the written consent of at least twenty-five percent (25%) of all the employees in the bargaining unit. Any petition filed before or after the sixty-day freedom period shall be dismissed outright. The twenty-five percent (25%) requirement shall be satisfied upon the filing of the petition, otherwise the petition shall be dismissed.

The sixty-day freedom period based on the original collective bargaining agreement shall not be affected by any amendment, extension or renewal of the collective bargaining agreement for purposes of certification election.

The decision calling for the conduct of an election shall contain the following:

(a) Names of the contending unions;

(b) Name of the employer;

(c) Description of the bargaining unit, and

(d) List of eligible voters which shall be based on the payroll three (3) months prior to the filing of the petition for certification election.

The certification election shall be held within twenty (20) calendar days from receipt of the order by the parties.

SECTION 7. Appeal. — Any aggrieved party may appeal the order of the Med-Arbiter to the Secretary on the ground that the rules and regulations or parts thereof established by the Secretary for the conduct of election have been violated.

The appeal shall specifically state the grounds relied upon by the appellant with the supporting memorandum.

SECTION 8. Where to file appeal. — The appeal, which shall be under oath and copy furnished the appellee, shall be filed in the Regional Office where the case originated.

SECTION 9. Period of Appeal. — The appeal shall be filed within ten (10) calendar days from receipt of the order by the appellant. Any opposition thereto may be filed within ten (10) calendar days from receipt of the appeal. The Regional Director shall within five (5) calendar days forward the entire records of the case to the Office of the Secretary.

SECTION 10. Decision of the Secretary final and unappealable. — The Secretary shall have fifteen (15) calendar days within which to decide the appeal from receipt of the records of the case. The filing of the appeal from the decision of the Med-Arbiter stays the holding of any certification election. The decision of the secretary shall be final and unappealable.

SECTION 11. Execution pending appeal. — The execution of the order of the Med-Arbiter shall be stayed pending appeal.

RULE VI : Election

SECTION 1. Conduct of an election. — The Regional Division shall cause the necessary posting of notices at least five (5) working days before the actual date of election in two most conspicuous places in the company premises. The notices shall contain the date of election, names of the contending parties, the description of the bargaining unit and the list of eligible voters.

SECTION 2. Election conducted during regular business day. — The election shall be set during the regular business day of the company unless otherwise agreed upon by the parties.

SECTION 3. Representation officer may rule on any on-the-spot questions. — The Representation Officer may rule on any on-the-spot question arising from the conduct of the election. The interested party may, however, file a protest with the Representation Officer before the close of the proceedings.

Protests not so raised are deemed waived. Such protests shall be contained in the minutes of the proceedings.

SECTION 4. Protest to be decided in twenty (20) working days. — When the protest is formalized before the Med-Arbiter within five (5) days after the close of the election proceedings, the Med-Arbiter shall decide the same within twenty (20) working days from the date of its formalization. If not formalized within the prescribed period, the protest shall be deemed dropped. The decision may be appealed to the Bureau in the same manner and on the same grounds as provided under Rule V.

SECTION 5. Motion to postpone does not stay election. — The filing of a motion to postpone shall not stay the holding of the election.

SECTION 6. Duties of Representation Officer. — Before the actual voting commences, the Representation Officer shall inspect the polling place, the ballot boxes and the polling booths to insure secrecy of balloting. The parties shall be given opportunity to witness the inspection proceedings. After the examination of the ballot box, the Representation Officer shall lock it with three keys one of which he shall keep and the rest forthwith given one each to the employer's representative and the representative of the labor organization. If more than one union is involved, the holder of the third key shall be determined by drawing of lots. The key shall remain in the possession of the Representation Officer and the parties during the proceedings and thereafter until all the controversies concerning the conduct of the election shall have been definitely resolved.

SECTION 7. Preparation of ballots. — Ballots shall be prepared in Filipino and English along with a translation in the local dialect, if any, for the guidance of worker-voters.

SECTION 8. Marking and canvassing of votes. —

(a) The voter must write a cross (x) or a check (/) in the square opposite the union of his choice. If only one union is involved, the voter shall make his cross or check in the square indicating "Yes" or "No".

(b) If a ballot is torn, marked, or defaced, in such a manner as to create doubt or confusion or identify the voter, it shall be considered spoiled. If the voter inadvertently spoils a ballot, he shall return it to the Representation Officer who shall destroy it and deliver him another ballot.

(c) As soon as the polls close, the votes cast shall be counted and tabulated by the Representation Officer in the presence of the representatives of the parties. Upon completion of the canvassing, the Representation Officer shall give each representative a certification of the result of the election and minutes of the concluded election.

(d) The ballots, tally sheets, and certification of the results, together with the minutes of the election, shall be sealed in an envelope and signed outside by the Representation Officer and by representatives of the contending parties. These envelopes shall remain sealed under the custody of the Representation Officer until after the Med-Arbiter has finally certified the winner.

(e) The Med-Arbiter, upon receipt of the results of the election and no protest having been filed, shall certify the winner.

(f) The union which obtained a majority of the valid votes cast by the eligible voters shall be certified as the sole and exclusive bargaining agent of all the workers in the appropriate unit. However, in order to have a valid election, at least a majority of all eligible voters in the bargaining unit must have cast their votes.

RULE VII : Challenges and Run-Offs

SECTION 1. Challenging of votes. — (a) Any vote may be challenged for a valid cause by any observer before the voter has deposited his vote in the ballot box.

(b) If a ballot is challenged on valid grounds, the Representation Officer shall segregate it from the unchallenged ballots and seal it in an envelope. The Representation Officer shall indicate on the envelope the name of the challenger and the ground of the challenge.

SECTION 2. Run-off election. — When an election which provides for three (3) or more choices results in no choice receiving a majority of the valid votes cast, and no objections or challenges have been presented which if sustained might change the results, the representation officer shall motu proprio conduct a run-off election within five (5) calendar days from the close of the election between the labor unions receiving the two highest number of votes; Provided, that the total number of votes for all contending unions is at least fifty (50%) percent of the number of votes cast.

The ballots in the run-off election shall provide for two choices receiving the highest and the second highest number of the votes cast.