Massachusetts Statutes
§ 4 — Advertising or soliciting for employees during normal business after a strike or labor trouble; determination of question
Massachusetts § 4
JurisdictionMassachusetts
Part IADMINISTRATION OF THE GOVERNMENT
Title XXILABOR AND INDUSTRIES
Ch. 150CONCILIATION AND ARBITRATION OF INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES
This text of Massachusetts § 4 (Advertising or soliciting for employees during normal business after a strike or labor trouble; determination of question) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 150, § 4 (2026).
Text
Section 4. The provisions of sections twenty-two and twenty-three of chapter one hundred and forty-nine relative to advertising during strikes shall cease to be operative when the board shall determine that the business of the employer, in respect to which the strike or other labor trouble occurred, is being carried on in the normal and usual manner and to the normal and usual extent. Upon the application of the employer, this question shall be determined by said board, but only after a full hearing at which all persons involved shall be entitled to be heard and represented by counsel. The board shall give at least three days' notice of the hearing to the strikers and employees by publication in at least three daily newspapers published in the commonwealth, and by mailing a copy of said no
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Bluebook (online)
Massachusetts § 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ma/150/4.