Court Agrees With Labor Unions: Giant Inflatable Rats Are Protected Speech


In case you were wondering, displaying giant inflateable rats is protected by the First Amendment. Apparently a balloon rodent known as Scabby the Rat has been a labor union protest symbol since the '90s. But New York-based Microtech Contracting felt the display of Scabby by unions representing some of its workers was a violation of the pair's collective bargaining agreement.
Microtech challenged the Mason Tenders District Council of Greater New York and the Asbestos, Lead, and Hazardous Waste Laborers' Local 78 over the rat in federal court. District Judge Joseph Bianco sided with the unions—the latest in a series of legal victories for the protected speech status of giant inflatable rats.
From the National Constitution Center's blog:
Since Scabby's humble birth in Chicago years ago in 1990, the rat with the union label has become a symbol of protest at different locations across America. Anyone can buy a rat, ranging from 6 feet to 25 feet tall, from Plainfield, Illinois-based Big Sky Balloons and Searchlights. The typical rat runs from $2,000 to $8,000.
But how and where these rats have been used have triggered three recent court challenges, with the rats coming out on top in debates over the First Amendment and contracts.
The most recent pro-rodent decision came down in the Microtech case in New York. Federal District Judge Joseph Bianco ruled that the rat didn't violate the collective bargaining agreement in force, and the court lacked jurisdiction.
Specifically, Bianco said the rat didn't violate the union's no-strike clause, "[T]he defendants' peaceful use of a stationary, inflatable rat to publicize a labor protest is protected by the First Amendment."
Using the rat was a form of general speech, Bianco said, and banning the rat was tantamount to barring any general speech harmful to the plaintiff's business image.
Back in 2011, giant rats won a key ruling from the National Labor Relations Board when it held that deploying the rodent protest balloon wasn't same as using a picket sign at a protest site.
Under the National Labor Relations Act, unions can't picket or engage in "secondary activity" or "secondary boycotts" that lead neutral parties to "cease doing business with employers."
In a 2009 case, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that a Lawrence Township ban on inflatable signs unless used for store openings was unconstitutional after the city tried to fine the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 269 for displaying Scabby the Rat.
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Now we just need the left to get on board with Citizens United.
Good call by the courts. But to clarify: the giant inflatable rats are a metaphor for the unions, right?
Seems apt.
They're a metaphor for those who cross picket lines, hence the name Scabby the rat. It's meant to dehumanize anyone who dares to disagree with the union, to tacitly justify violence done to them. If they were a metaphor for the unions, they'd be ticks.
Perception of rats vs. squirrels
Yeah, at first I thought it was a mascot...
Ah sweet old New York memories of scabby, who frequented the Upper West Side. While the union members shouted at everyone passing by, "there's big giant rats in that building! huge ones! never go in!"
Didn't ever seem to stop the unions from steadily losing membership or public support. I wonder why.
Living in North Jersey in the NYC area, I've grown quite fond of Scabby over the years.
The best part would be how everyone was ignoring them and going about their business. Then you'd get inside your building and inevitably several people would exclaim how much they hated the picketers and how annoying they were.
my buddy's step-sister makes $72 /hr on the computer . She has been without a job for ten months but last month her paycheck was $17405 just working on the computer for a few hours.visit this site....
?????? http://www.payinsider.com
She's the rat stealing from us and exploiting us on a daily basis. That has to be the reason her paycheck is so high.
*there was a spam comment, but it was removed
Back in 2011, giant rats won a key ruling from the National Labor Relations Board when it held that deploying the rodent protest balloon wasn't same as using a picket sign at a protest site.
That does seem kind of strange, though. The more logical conclusion would have been to invalidate the ban on picket signs.
But the narrower decision allows them to maintain control.
Yeah, even if it makes no logical sense whatsoever.
For some reason, those rats remind me of Harry Reid.
The menace of Big Balloon must be stopped! Hell, no, we won't blow!
And wait until they use this case as a wedge for their giant ROBOT rats. Is it speech when Robo-Rat topples a building?
Destruction of property. Unless the rat's owner owned that building, there's a suit for damages coming.
No, that's conduct as speech. Like flag burning. The Robo-Rat, exercising the will of the people, uses a disposition matrix to analyze and rule on due process at the scene.
Rattus Laborious
The trick here is to start a non-union company whose logo/mascot is already a rearing, be-fanged, red-eyed-rat. That way, they're just helping you advertise.
This is why there's no exterminators union.
How many times have the police cited a union for blocking the sidewalk or otherwise creating a hazard to navigation?
You mean, how many times have police union members enforced the law against their fellow union members?
Kinda answers itself, no?
My buddy's step-aunt makes $89 every hour on the laptop . She has been without work for 8 months but last month her check was $14034 just working on the laptop for a few hours. check out here. ???? http://www.jobsfish.com
So is Big Sky Balloons and Searchlights a union shop?
Wow man what a cool deal.
http://www.Safe-Anon.tk
$2000 to $8000! I am sure the union members are so happy that their dues are being well spent.