Kraft Foods North America, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsAug 27, 2010355 N.L.R.B. 753 (N.L.R.B. 2010) Copy Citation KRAFT FOODS NORTH AMERICA, INC. 355 NLRB No. 156 753 Kraft Foods North America, Inc. and Office & Pro- fessional Employees International Union, Local 1295, AFL–CIO. Case 1–CA–39068 August 27, 2010 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN LIEBMAN AND MEMBERS SCHAUMBER AND BECKER The issue in this case is whether the Respondent was obligated to provide the Union representing the bargain- ing unit at issue with copies of the employee benefit plans in effect at its other plants. The Union requested this material 15 months in advance of bargaining for a successor contract, in order to prepare for those negotia- tions.1 The timeliness of a request for information under the Act must be assessed as of the date when the request is made. We find that under the circumstances of this case, the information requested was shown to be relevant to the Union’s bargaining responsibilities, and that the Un- ion’s request for that information was not premature in view of the parties’ bargaining history. Accordingly, the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) of the Act by refus- ing to comply with the request. Background The material facts are not in dispute. The Respondent manufactures gelatin at its Atlantic Gelatin plant in Wo- burn, Massachusetts, which employs 275 employees rep- resented by the Union. The Respondent also employs over 60,000 employees in approximately 80 other plants around the country. The parties had a collective- bargaining agreement governing the Woburn unit run- ning from May 21, 1996, to May 20, 1999 (the 1996 agreement). A successor agreement ran from May 21, 1999, to May 20, 2002 (the 1999 agreement). During negotiations for the 1996 agreement, paid time off became a significant bargaining issue. When the Un- ion proposed increases in paid vacation, sick time, and holidays, the Respondent’s chief negotiator, John Dono- van, refused, stating that the Woburn unit employees were “the most highly paid, highly benefited people within the Corporation.” Donovan was not only the chief management spokesman for the Woburn facility, but 1 On May 24, 2002, Administrative Law Judge Martin J. Linsky is- sued the attached decision. The Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief, the General Counsel filed an answering brief, and the Respondent filed a reply brief. The National Labor Relations Board has delegated its authority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has considered the decision and the record in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the judge’s rulings, findings, and conclusions. negotiated contracts for the Respondent at a number of its other plants as well. Also during the 1996 negotiations, the Respondent proposed several new benefit plans, together designated “Kraft Choice,” to replace the plans currently in effect at Woburn.2 The Union agreed to accept these new plans on the basis of the Respondent’s assurance that they had been found satisfactory at other Kraft facilities. The par- ties ultimately reached agreement on what became the 1996 agreement. A few months after the 1996 agreement took effect, the Respondent announced that it would no longer pay a Christmas bonus. The Union objected to this action through its grievance procedure, and the issue was dis- cussed at a grievance session on April 17, 1997. At that session, the Respondent agreed to pay the bonus. In agreeing, however, as confirmed in the Respondent’s minutes from the session, John Brady, the Respondent’s regional human resources manager, who had also been on the management negotiating committee for the 1996 agreement, stated the following: Flexibility is required for every Kraft plant going. . . . Union should know that [Woburn] employees are among the highest paid in the Kraft corporation and have the costliest benefits. This is the only plant in the corporation that receives a Christmas bonus. The Company should get value and flexibility from this in- vestment. In February and March 1999, less than 2 months be- fore face-to-face negotiations were to begin for the 1999 agreement, the Union requested copies of and additional information concerning the health, sick pay, retirement, and vacation benefit plans in force at the Respondent’s other facilities. The Respondent refused to provide the requested material, and the Union filed a charge with the Board. In June 1999, while the charge was being proc- essed, the parties reached agreement on what became the 1999 agreement. At the Union’s request, the Region then dismissed the charge.3 During the negotiations leading up to the 1999 agree- ment, the Respondent again compared the Woburn unit’s benefits to the benefits at other Kraft facilities. Dono- van, once more the Respondent’s chief spokesman, re- 2 The Respondent’s new proposed plans included the “Kraft Choice Medical Plan,” the “Kraft Choice Dental Plan,” and the “KGE [Kraft General Foods] Personal Accident Insurance Plan.” The Respondent characterized “Kraft Choice” as an “umbrella” term. 3 However, the Regional Director noted in that dismissal that “the investigation revealed sufficient evidence to establish that the [Respon- dent] unlawfully failed to provide information concerning the benefit programs at the [Respondent’s] other facilities,” and gave “notice” that “any further such conduct may result in the issuance of complaint. . . .” DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 754 sponded to a union proposal to eliminate the waiting pe- riod for sick pay by stating that the waiting period could not be waived and that “it was the same policy through- out Kraft for the Sick Plan.” Brady, who also partici- pated in the negotiations, repeated that the Woburn em- ployees were “among the highest paid in the Kraft corpo- ration and have the costliest benefits.” In addition, the Respondent proposed a “Kraft Corporate” substance abuse policy to replace the policy in effect at Woburn, which the Union rejected. On January 11 and February 26, 2001—15 months and 14 months, respectively, before negotiations would start for a contract to succeed the 1999 agreement—the Union again made written requests for copies of the health, dis- ability, retirement, sick time, and vacation plans at the Respondent’s other plants. Once more, the Respondent, in an undated letter sent sometime before February 26 in response to the January 11 requests, refused to provide any of these materials on the asserted ground that they were “not relevant.” The Respondent also stated: [T]he Company has not indicated in any way that it will be proposing any changes in the existing benefit plans [at] Woburn or that, if changes are proposed, such changes are based upon terms and conditions which exist in other facilities. On February 26, 2001, the Union’s president, Ken Borden, wrote back, stating, in part: The relevancy of these materials is that, on numerous occasions at negotiations sessions, Kraft Representa- tives have made references to the other facilities within the organization, and the benefit plans, wages, and policies in effect there, in comparison with those at the Woburn, MA, facility. Borden’s letter also cited the Union’s previous request for this material, the Respondent’s refusal to provide it, the Union’s 1999 Board charge based on that refusal, and the voluntary dismissal of that charge in connection with the parties’ previous contract settlement. By letter on March 16, 2001, the Respondent again re- fused to provide any of the requested information, assert- ing the following: Even if such statements [by Kraft representatives] were made . . . the Union must establish that, at the present time, the Company is taking a bargaining position based upon what benefits are in effect at other loca- tions. As the union cannot meet this burden, we be- lieve that your request . . . is not relevant. On May 14, 2001, the Union filed the charge at issue here. At the unfair labor practice hearing, Borden confirmed that the Union wanted the information about benefits at the Respondent’s other facilities because “the Company had made the statement on a couple of occasions that our benefits were the costliest . . . so that we could see for ourselves if we were, in fact, the . . . costliest benefits,” and also for the purpose of “formulating proposals [to go] into negotiations with as much information as possi- ble.” Borden also testified that the Union made the re- quests for information well in advance of the 2002 nego- tiations because the Respondent had refused to comply with the same request in 1999. Borden said that “we felt it would be a good idea to put the information requests in much earlier this time so that we could, if there were any legal dealings . . . have those out of the way prior to ne- gotiations starting.”4 The judge found that the Union had demonstrated the relevance of the information requested. He also found that the requests were “continuing” and therefore not untimely. Accordingly, the judge concluded that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act by refusing to furnish the requested information. Analysis A. Relevance Although a union is required to show that a request for information about the terms and conditions of employ- ment of employees outside the bargaining unit is relevant to its representational duties, the required showing is subject to a liberal, “discovery-type standard” under Sec- tion 8(a)(5). NLRB v. Acme Industrial Co., 385 U.S. 432, 437 (1967). Accordingly, the union need show only a “probability that the desired information was relevant, and that it would be of use to the union in carrying out its statutory duties and responsibilities.” Id. The union’s burden is therefore “not an exceptionally heavy one.” SBC Midwest, 346 NLRB 62, 64 (2005). We agree with the judge that the Union demonstrated that the requested information was relevant. It is well established that employee health, disability, and vacation benefits are mandatory subjects of bargaining and there- fore a proper subject of information requests.5 More- over, on multiple occasions over a period of years, the Respondent had stated that the Woburn unit’s members were “the most highly paid, highly benefited people 4 The judge credited Borden generally, finding him “an honest wit- ness.” 5 See, e.g., MEMC Electronic Materials, 338 NLRB No. 142 (2003) (not reported in Board volume), enfd. 363 F.3d 705 (8th Cir. 2004); Metro Health Foundation, 338 NLRB 802 (2003). KRAFT FOODS NORTH AMERICA, INC. 755 within the Corporation,” and resisted the Union’s at- tempts to improve the unit’s benefits specifically on that ground. The Respondent’s own proposals in successive negotiations also clearly confirmed that its long-term goal was to standardize the benefits at the Woburn plant with those in place at Kraft’s other facilities. This nego- tiating history more than satisfies the Union’s burden of establishing the relevance of the requested information concerning benefits at the Respondent’s other facilities.6 B. Timeliness With respect to the timeliness of the Union’s request, the judge found that the request was “continuing” and therefore not premature. The Respondent challenges that finding, pointing out that the request was made more than a year before contract negotiations would begin. We agree with the judge that the request was timely, for the reasons that follow. As the Seventh Circuit has observed, a union’s “prof- fered reasons for demanding the information, as well as [the employer’s] motives for refusing that demand, must be examined as of the time of the demand and the re- fusal.” General Electric Co. v. NLRB, 916 F.2d 1163, 1169 (7th Cir. 1998). Moreover, “the adequacy of the union’s request . . . must be judged in the light of the entire pattern of facts available to the employer. . . .” Id. at 1170 (internal citations omitted). The facts cited by the Union to the Respondent in early 2001 made it obvi- ous both why the information was relevant and why the Union was requesting the information well in advance of the 2002 negotiations. As explained above, the Respondent for at least 5 years had compared the benefits at the Woburn unit with the benefits at its other facilities, and responded to the Union’s bargaining proposals using that comparison. However, when the Union submitted a timely request for corporatewide benefit information in 1999—less than 2 months before negotiations for the successor contract were to begin—the Respondent neither complied nor even attempted to reach an accommodation with the Un- ion by providing some portion of the information sought. The Union was forced to file a charge with the Board, 6 See Caldwell Mfg., 346 NLRB 1159, 1159–1160 (2006) (employer made cost and productivity information from its other facilities relevant by claiming that bargaining unit was less competitive); Allison Corp., 330 NLRB 1363, 1367–1368 (2000) (employer made requested infor- mation on subcontracting and import of materials relevant by attribut- ing layoffs to those factors); Langston Cos., 304 NLRB 1022, 1070- 1071 (1991) (employer made information on corporatewide substance abuse program relevant by referring to it in bargaining); E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 276 NLRB 335 (1985) (employer made cost and productivity information from its other facilities relevant by claiming bargaining unit needed to be restructured). and that charge was not resolved by the time the parties reached the 1999 agreement. Given this history, it was entirely reasonable for the Union to assume that, in order to obtain corporatewide information in time to make use of it in the 2002 negotia- tions, it would have to submit its request early enough to obtain timely enforcement of the request through the Board if necessary. The Respondent had given the Un- ion no reason to believe that the requested information would be any more forthcoming than the last time. In this setting, it would arguably have been imprudent for the Union not to submit its second request for informa- tion as early as it did. For this reason, the Respondent’s assertion that the Union’s request was premature because the Respondent had not yet cited benefits at other facili- ties in relation to the next contract negotiations is unper- suasive. The Respondent cites the Seventh Circuit’s holding in General Electric Co., supra, but that decision, although declining to enforce the Board’s order, supports our con- clusion here (contrary to the dissent’s view). The court observed that there was no evidence that the parties in that case “were preparing in earnest for . . . negotiations” at the time the union submitted its request for informa- tion concerning maintenance subcontracting. Id. at 1170. Moreover, the court emphasized that the union did not even allege that the company had ever raised the issue of maintenance costs in prior negotiations. Id.7 Here, in contrast, the Union was “preparing in earnest” for up- coming negotiations8 (and for the Respondent’s predict- able intransigence in providing this specific, relevant information), even at the early date it made its request. And the Respondent here had indeed “raised costs during prior bargaining battles” by repeatedly asserting that the unit members were “the most highly paid, highly bene- fited people within the Corporation.” In short, General Electric supports our finding that the Union’s request was not premature and that the Respondent acted unlaw- fully.9 7 The court also distinguished its prior decision in J .I. Case Co., 253 F.2d 149 (7th Cir. 1958), in which the court had found a request for information timely even though it was made long before contract expi- ration, because the union in that case “was actually preparing for con- tract negotiations.” Id. at 1171 fn.5. Here, as in J. I. Case, the Union was similarly preparing for negotiations. 8 The dissent contests this fact, but the Union president’s testimony establishes that the Union was both preparing its proposals and antici- pating the Respondent’s positions and considering possible responses. The dissent further asserts that both parties must be preparing for bar- gaining before information requests are timely, but one party’s dilatori- ness cannot prevent its counterpart from obtaining the information it needs to prepare. 9 In the underlying Board case, General Electric, 294 NLRB 146 (1989), enf. denied 916 F.2d 1163 (7th Cir. 1990), the Board had found DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 756 The dissent asserts that our analysis is “premised on . . . an alchemy of conjecture and assumption” and as- serts that our decision will permit “massive information requests for non-presumptively relevant information” to be made “at virtually any time during the existence of a bargaining relationship under the guise of unilateral ‘preparations for negotiations.’” To the contrary, our holding here is a relatively narrow one, grounded in the facts of this case and in the practical realities of litigation before the Board, which can proceed too slowly to make the statutory right to information a meaningful one. The dissent, in contrast, would put the Union in a double- bind: its request for information would be ripe only when it was too late for the information to be timely received. Needless to say, we reject the dissent’s approach, which reflect an unfounded skepticism about the usefulness of sharing information in collective bargaining and in estab- lishing enlightened relations between labor and manage- ment. REMEDY Because we have found that the Respondent unlaw- fully refused to provide the information requested by the Union, we shall order it to do so.10 ORDER The National Labor Relations Board orders that the Respondent, Kraft Foods North America, Inc., Woburn, Massachusetts, its officers, agents, successors, and as- signs, shall take the following actions. 1. Cease and desist from that a request for information made 13 months before contract negotia- tions was not premature because, “by the time of the [Board] hearing in [that] case, those negotiations were sufficiently close at hand. . . .” 294 NLRB at 146. The Seventh Circuit denied enforcement on the ground that this finding was legally erroneous, holding that the Board should have assessed the request “as of the time it was made.” 916 F.2d at 1169. No party in this case has argued that the Union’s request was timely because it had become so by the date of the hearing. We note further that neither General Electric nor this case involves an alter ego dispute in which the union seeks information on the rela- tionship between the employer and another entity. In such a case, the union “need not inform the signatory employer of the factual basis for its request” at the time of the request, “but need only indicate the reason for the request.” Disneyland Park, 350 NLRB 1256 (2007); Pulaski Construction Co., 345 NLRB 931 (2005) (same; Contract Flooring Systems, 344 NLRB 925 (2005) (same). 10 The judge found, sua sponte, that to provide copies of all of the benefit plans for all of its facilities would be an “onerous” burden to the Respondent. However, as the Respondent concedes in its reply brief, the Respondent has never asserted that the request was burdensome. This issue was therefore not before the judge. We will accordingly issue a standard remedial order that the Respondent provide the re- quested information. If any of the information can be provided in an alternative form preferable to both the Union and the Respondent, the matter may be pursued in compliance. (a) Failing and refusing to bargain in good faith with the Office & Professional Employees International Un- ion, Local 1295, AFL–CIO (the Union) by failing to pro- vide the Union with requested information that is neces- sary and relevant to the performance of the Union’s du- ties as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative for the employees in the following appropriate unit: All regular employees of the Company’s Hill Street, Woburn, Massachusetts plant, excluding executive, su- pervisory, office, clerical, technical and professional employees, salesmen and plant protection officers. (b) In any like or related manner interfering with, re- straining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them by Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to effectuate the purpose of the Act. (a) Immediately comply with the requests for informa- tion from the Union dated January 11 and February 26, 2001, with respect to all information and documents sought pertaining to benefit plans in force at the Respon- dent’s other facilities in the continental United States. (b) Within 14 days after service by the Region, post at its Atlantic Gelatin plant in Woburn, Massachusetts, cop- ies of the attached notice marked “Appendix.”11 Copies of the notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 1, after being signed by the Respondent’s authorized representative, shall be posted by the Respon- dent and maintained for 60 consecutive days in con- spicuous places including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to ensure that the no- tices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. In the event that, during the pendency of these proceedings, the Respondent has gone out of business or closed the facility involved in these proceedings, the Re- spondent shall duplicate and mail, at its own expense, a copy of the notice to all current employees and former employees employed by the Respondent at any time since February 26, 2001. (c) Within 21 days after service by the Region, file with the Regional Director a sworn certification of a re- sponsible official on a form provided by the Region at- testing to the steps that the Respondent has taken to comply. 11 If this Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States court of appeals, the words in the notice reading “Posted by Order of the Na- tional Labor Relations Board” shall read “Posted Pursuant to a Judg- ment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.” KRAFT FOODS NORTH AMERICA, INC. 757 MEMBER SCHAUMBER, dissenting. An employer’s statutory duty to bargain includes a duty to furnish requested relevant information. When the information requested is not presumptively relevant, as here, “the [u]nion’s proffered reasons for demanding the information, as well as [the employer’s] motives for re- fusing that demand, must be examined as of the time of the demand and refusal.” General Electric Co. v. NLRB, 916 F.2d 1163, 1169 (7th Cir. 1990). Applying that stan- dard, I find that the Union’s information requests—for copies of all the benefit plans at Respondent’s 80 plants nationwide, covering some 60,000 employees—made 15 months and 14 months respectively before bargaining was even to begin on a successor contract, were prema- ture and that the Respondent did not violate Section 8(a)(5) of the Act by refusing to furnish the information. By focusing only on the Union’s “proffered reasons for demanding the information” and ignoring the Respon- dent’s “motives for refusing that demand,” the majority finds the information request timely and the Respon- dent’s refusal unlawful. I dissent. The majority has fully set out the facts. In brief, the Union made its initial information request for copies of certain benefit plans “at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States” 15 months before negotiations were due to begin in April 2002. The second informa- tion request for “[c]opies of all Vacation Plans in effect at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States” followed a month later. There was no evidence of a midterm reopener clause. There was no indication that the parties had begun to negotiate over a new con- tract or were preparing in earnest for such negotiations. The Union did not renew its requests closer in time to the commencement of bargaining. Moreover, although the Respondent had referred, in 1996 and 1997, to the Wo- burn unit employees, those at issue here, as having the costliest benefits, it never indicated to the Union that benefits would be an issue when negotiations for a suc- cessor agreement ultimately commenced in 2002. In holding that the Respondent violated the Act by de- nying the information requests, the majority does not find that the requests were timely in regard to any current or impending negotiations or to any current dispute or grievance that implicated the proper interpretation of a contractual term. Rather, the majority relies on the Re- spondent’s prior statements to the effect that the Woburn unit employees were the most highly paid, highly bene- fited people within the corporation, as well as the Re- spondent’s denial of an earlier information request, to find that the Union was fulfilling its “bargaining respon- sibilities” in making the requests when it did. Conjectur- ing, in effect, that the Union made the requests prema- turely because it anticipated that the Respondent would refuse them and that the Union would then litigate the issue, and, assuming that the refusal would be found unlawful, the majority finds the requests were timely because the Respondent would have to furnish the infor- mation in time for the negotiation of the successor agreement. But an analysis premised on such an al- chemy of conjecture and assumption stretches even the Board’s lenient information request standard beyond all reasonable limits. Although not cited by the judge, the Board’s and Sev- enth Circuit’s decisions in General Electric Co., 294 NLRB 146 (1989), enf. denied 916 F.2d 1163 (1990), are instructive. In that case, the judge found that the em- ployer violated Section 8(a)(5) by refusing to furnish requested information about maintenance subcontracting. The judge found the information relevant because it re- lated both to the processing of grievances and to future contract negotiations. In affirming the judge’s unfair labor practice finding, the Board relied solely on the ra- tionale that the information was relevant to future nego- tiations. The Board found that the union had referred to contract negotiations in its request and that “at least by the time of the hearing,” those negotiations were suffi- ciently close at hand to require the employer to provide the information. Id. at 146. At the time of the request itself, however, the expiration of the parties’ collective- bargaining agreement was 16 months away, and the ear- liest date for commencement of bargaining was 13 months away. Concluding that the Board’s decision “evidence[d] an unreasonable application of the Act,” the Seventh Circuit denied enforcement. General Electric Co. v. NLRB, 916 F.2d at 1165. The court found instead that the union’s request for information was “premature and insufficient” because the demand had been made over a year before bargaining could have begun, the existing contract did not provide for mid-term bargaining, and there was no evidence that the parties “had begun to negotiate over a new contract or were preparing in earnest for such nego- tiations.” Id. at 1170–1171. Further, there was no evi- dence that the union “ever renewed its [information] re- quest . . . linking it more closely, both in time and pur- pose, to contract negotiations.” Id. at 1169 fn. 4. The court rejected the Board’s premise that the inquiry into the relevance of the information “allowed it to consider the state of affairs ‘by the time of the hearing.’” Id. at 1169. In the court’s view, as explained above, “the [u]nion’s proffered reasons for demanding the informa- tion, as well as [the employer’s] motives for refusing that demand, must be examined as of the time of the demand and refusal.” Id. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 758 I agree with the reasoning of the court and apply that analysis here.1 When a union requests information that is not presumptively relevant, the employer must assess relevance; it can only do so based on the realities existing at the time the request is made. If no present connection exists between the requested information and the union’s representative duties, the employer does not violate Sec- tion 8(a)(5) by declining to furnish that information. Since that is precisely what happened here, the Respon- dent did not violate the Act by refusing to furnish the information requested.2 In finding otherwise, the major- ity employs a rationale that, like the Board’s rationale in General Electric, must be rejected as “an unreasonable application of the Act.”3 Under their rationale, massive information requests for nonpresumptively relevant in- formation, such as the one at issue here, may be inter- posed at virtually any time during the existence of a bar- 1 The majority’s attempt to wrap itself in the court’s reasoning fails. Contrary to the majority, the court did not simply analyze whether the union there was “preparing in earnest” for negotiations but rather whether both parties were. Here, there is no indication that the Respon- dent was engaged in any contract preparations. Further, in elaborating on what it meant to be “preparing in earnest” for negotiations, the court referred to two other cases, San Diego Newspaper Guild v. NLRB, 548 F.2d 863, 868 (9th Cir. 1977), and NLRB v. Goodyear Aerospace Corp., 497 F.2d 747, 751–752 (6th Cir. 1974). In the first, it indicated that the information was not requested for any valid bargaining purpose where the contract had at least 2 years to run, and “‘there was no evi- dence of contract negotiation being carried on with the [u]nion at the time of the request;” and, in the second, it indicated that the refusal to furnish information was not unlawful “as the parties were not engaged in ‘genuine negotiations’ but were merely ‘sparring.’” General Electric v. NLRB, 916 F.2d at 1170. Here, where the parties were neither en- gaged in “genuine negotiations” nor even “sparring,” and the then- current contract had well over a year to run, it can hardly be said that they were “preparing in earnest” for upcoming negotiations as the court understood that term. 2 Since the information requests were premature, it is unnecessary to decide whether they were otherwise relevant or whether they were overly broad. While I question the validity of the majority’s discussion of the standard for demonstrating relevance in the alter ego context for the reasons set out at Contract Flooring Systems, 344 NLRB 925, 925 (2005), I need not address that standard here where alter ego status is not in issue. 3 J. I. Case Co. v. NLRB, 253 F.2d 149 (7th Cir. 1958), relied on by the majority to support its position that an information request may be timely even if made long before contract expiration, is readily distin- guishable. The contract at issue in that case was due to expire in Janu- ary 1958, but was reopenable as to wages in January 1957. In finding that the March 1956 information request at issue, which implicated wages, was timely, the court emphasized that the union “was actually preparing for contract negotiations the following January to which the data would be relevant.” Id. at 155 (emphasis added in part). In other words, the court found the information request timely as to the January 1957 reopener, some 9 months after the request was made, not to the date of contract expiration, some 21 months later. As the information requests at issue in the present case not only fall well outside the 9 months found timely in J. I. Case, but were also made at a time when the Union was not actually preparing for contract negotiations, that case can only undermine, not support, the majority’s position. gaining relationship under the guise of unilateral “prepa- rations for negotiations.” Because that result is inconsis- tent both with our precedent and any reasonable con- struct of good faith bargaining, I respectfully dissent. APPENDIX NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government The National Labor Relations Board has found that we vio- lated Federal labor law and has ordered us to post and obey this Notice. FEDERAL LAW GIVES YOU THE RIGHT TO Form, join, or assist a union Choose representatives to bargain with us on your behalf Act together with other employees for your bene- fit and protection Choose not to engage in any of these protected activities WE WILL NOT refuse to provide your Union, Office & Professional Employees International Union, Local 1295, AFL–CIO, with requested information relevant to pre- paring for bargaining for a successor contract. WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce you in the exercise of your rights guaranteed you by Federal labor law. WE WILL provide the Union with copies of the em- ployee benefit plans in effect at our other plants, as the Union requested in order to prepare for bargaining. KRAFT FOODS OF NORTH AMERICA, INC. Robert J. DeBonis, Esq., for the General Counsel. Jules I. Crystal, Esq. (Ross & Hardies), of Chicago, Illinois, and James Fuller, Esq. (Kraft Foods North America, Inc.), for the Respondent. DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE MARTIN J. LINSKY, Administrative Law Judge. On May 14, 2001, the Office & Professional Employees International Un- ion, Local 1295, AFL–CIO (the Union), filed a charge in Case 1–CA–39068 against Kraft Foods North America, Inc. (the Respondent). On August 27, 2001, the National Labor Relations Board, by the Acting Regional Director for Region 1, issued a complaint alleging that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act), when it failed and re- fused to furnish the Union with information which the Union requested and which information was necessary for, and rele- vant to, the Union’s performance of its duties as the exclusive KRAFT FOODS NORTH AMERICA, INC. 759 collective-bargaining representative of a unit of Respondent’s employees. Respondent filed an answer in which it denied that it violated the Act in any way. A hearing was held before me on January 29, 2002, in Boston, Massachusetts. Based upon the entire record, including my observation of the demeanor of the witnesses, and after considering briefs filed by the General Counsel and Respondent, I make the following I. FINDINGS OF FACT At all material times, Respondent, a corporation with an of- fice and place of business in Woburn, Massachusetts, has been engaged in the manufacture, sale, and distribution of food prod- ucts. Respondent admits, and I find, that at all material times Re- spondent has been an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED Respondent admits, and I find, that at all material times the Union had been a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. The Facts The Union represents a unit of Respondent’s employees at Respondent’s Atlantic Gelatin Plant in Woburn, Massachusetts. Prior to 1990, General Foods owned the Woburn facility. In or about 1990, Phillip Morris purchased General Foods and merged it with Kraft Foods into what was called Kraft General Foods, and then simply Kraft Foods. The Woburn facility manufactures gelatin in a variety of fla- vors. The collective-bargaining agreement currently in effect be- tween Respondent and the Union, herein the 1999 agreement is effective, by its terms, from May 21, 1999, to May 20, 2002. The predecessor agreement between the parties, herein the 1996 agreement, was effective, by its terms, from May 21, 1996, to May 20, 1999. During the negotiations for the 1996 agreement which oc- curred in April and May 1996, the issue of paid time off came up for discussion. When the Union proposed additional vaca- tion and sick time, as well as an additional holiday, according to Local President Kenneth B. Borden, who was present at the negotiating session and was a member of the union bargaining committee testified the following occurred: A. The Employer, through John Donovan, made it very clear that they were not willing to give us any more paid time off. The statement that was made was that we were the most highly paid, highly benefited people within the Corporation. The Company was not interested in giv- ing us more time off with pay. Q. Now do you remember about when Mr. Donovan made these statements? A. The exact day? Q. Or the approximate date? A. No, it was some—some time in mid-April to mid- May, during the negotiations. Q. Of 1996? A Yes. Q. Okay. What did he say again? Could you repeat that. A. Yes, he said that the Company wasn’t interested in giving us anymore paid time off. We were the most highly paid, highly-benefited people in the organization. (Tr. 39.) John T. Donovan was the chief spokesman for the manage- ment negotiating team and negotiated contracts for Respondent at a number of locations. Donovan denied he said this but I credit Borden that he did say it for the reasons recited below. Donovan no longer works for Respondent but is employed elsewhere. This fact doesn’t add or detract from Donovan’s credibility in my judgment. Some months after the 1996 agreement took effect, a dispute arose as to the Christmas bonus. Respondent announced that it would no longer pay a Christmas bonus. The Union filed a grievance and the matter was discussed at a Joint Labor Rela- tions Committee (JLRC) meeting on April 17, 1997. John “Ike” Brady, who was on the management negotiating committee for the 1996 agreement, which was headed by John T. Donovan, was present at the meeting where the Christmas bonus was discussed. According to Kenneth Borden, Local president who was present at the JLRC meeting on April 17, 1997, the following occurred: A. Okay. The discussion came up because there was a grievance filed about the Christmas—about not receiving the Christmas bonus for the duration of the Contract. We had questioned the Company as to when the bonuses were going to be paid for Christmas, and the response we got at the local level was that we were not going to receive the Christmas bonus anymore. Subsequently, there was a Grievance filed. We brought it up in discussion at the JLRC meeting, and there was some preliminary discus- sion; and a gentleman by the name of . . . [John “Ike”] Brady said that he would have to make some telephone calls. He left the meeting for a period of time. He came back into the meeting and let everybody in the room know that the Christmas bonus would be paid; that we were the only plant within Kraft Foods that still received a Christmas bonus; that they expected some amount of—some type of return in acknowledgment of us getting this continued Christmas bonus while other plants did not receive it; that it was something that he felt was not negotiated and that we were, in fact, not entitled to it, but he was going to give it to us anyways; and he made a comment about us being, again, highly-paid and highly benefited employees within the Corporation. JUDGE LINSKY: Now who said that, again? THE WITNESS: Ike Brady. (Tr. 41–42) A number of issues were discussed at the April 17, 1997 JLRC meeting. Minutes of the meeting were prepared by man- DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 760 agement and distributed to management and the Union. The minutes contain the following section on page 14: Agree to pay Christmas bonus. Snow day discussion is fin- ished. Expressed concern with expectations of the Union. Believes that Union wants to move forward. Flexibility is re- quired for every Kraft plant going. Believes everyone is committed to making things better. Union should know that Atlantic Gelatin employees are among the highest paid in the Kraft corporation and have the costliest benefits. This is the only plant in the corporation that receives a Christmas bonus. The Company should get value and flexibility from this in- vestment.” (GC Exh. 11.) On February 26, 1999, shortly before negotiations began for the 1999 agreement the Union made a information request not unlike the information request at issue in this case. Respondent refused to turn over the information. The Union filed a charge and while the charge was being processed Respondent and the Union agreed to a new contract, i.e., the 1999 agreement, which runs from May 21, 1999, to May 20, 2002. Since the parties had agreed to a new contract the Region issued a merit dis- missal letter dismissing the charge. (GC Exh. 15.) About January 11, 2001, the Union, by four separate letters to Patricia Edwards, the human resources manager at the Wo- burn facility from Union President Kenneth Borden, requested that Respondent furnish the Union with the following informa- tion: (1) Copies of all Health Insurance/HMO Plans offered at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States. (2) Copies of all short term, long term disability plans and supplemental plans in effect at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States. (3) Copies of all Retirement Plans in effect at all Kraft Food plants within the continental United States. (4) Copies of all sick time policies in effect at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States. About February 26, 2001, the Union, by letter to Patricia Edwards from Union President Borden, requested that Respon- dent furnish the Union with the following information: (1) Copies of all Vacation Plans in effect at all Kraft Foods plants within the continental United States. Respondent’s director of labor relations, Jeffrey A. Horne, advised the Union that Respondent would not furnish the re- quested information and none of the requested information has been turned over to the Union. On May 14, 2001, the Union filed the charge in Case 1–CA– 39068. Negotiations ordinarily wouldn’t start until April of 2002 and Respondent claims the information request by the Union is premature. However, the Union made the information request which is a continuing information request assuming Respon- dent would again refuse to turn over the data and hoping, I suspect, that the Board could decide the case before negotia- tions for the 2002 agreement got under way. I suspect, without really knowing, that if the Board finds in favor of the General Counsel and the Union that the Respondent will litigate this matter in anyone of several U.S. Courts of Appeals. Borden testified that during the 1999 negotiations the issue of fully paid sick days was discussed. Borden testified as fol- lows: Q. Mr. Borden, during the 1999 negotiations, did the subject of Sick Pay ever come up? A. Yes; it did. Q. And can—can you just summarize what the discus- sion was with respect to Sick Pay? A. The Union had a proposal on the table—we were looking to get ten fully-paid sick days for our employees, without any waiting period. There was discussion around that, and the Company’s response to that was that it could not waive the waiting period; that it was a—it was the same policy throughout Kraft for the Sick Plan. Q. Okay. What is the waiting—waiting period? A. You have a three-day waiting period in order to collect Sick Pay benefits, unless you’re hospitalized. Q. Now we’ve just—the Judge has just received into the record— A. JUDGE LINSKY: Excuse me; I’m sorry. Who said that, for the Company? The WITNESS: John Donovan. JUDGE LINSKY: Thank you. (Tr. 52.) In so far as Donovan contradicts Borden I credit Borden. By his demeanor Borden impressed me as an honest witness. In addition Borden was corroborated by what he testified Brady said at the April 17, 1997 JLRC meeting. Brady who is no longer with Respondent did not testify but what Borden says Brady said is memorialized in the minutes of the JLRC meet- ings, i.e., the Woburn employees “are among the highest paid in the Kraft corporation and have the costliest benefits.” Brady was on the 1996 management negotiating team and served un- der Donovan. Even Donovan concedes that Brady was at half the negotiating sessions and he was in a position, like Borden, to hear what Donovan had to say about the pay and benefits of the Woburn employees. Donovan claims he wouldn’t even [have] known how the wages and benefits at the Woburn facility compared to others of Respondent’s facilities because he had responsibility for only 20 to 25 facilities. However, it didn’t take very long for Respondent to verify that only the Woburn facility employees received a Christmas bonus or that the waiting time on sick pay was the same companywide. The amount of information requested by the Union is exten- sive. Director of Labor Relations Jeffrey Horne testified and I credit his testimony based on his demeanor and the fact that he was not contradicted by any other credible evidence that Kraft employs 65,000 people, operates 80 plants, and has approxi- mately 800 different benefit plans in the continental United States. The Union information request is broad enough to cover all 800 benefit plans at all 80 plants. According to the charge, the Woburn facility employs approximately 275 em- ployees. When asked at the hearing why the Union needed the infor- mation it requested in 1999, Borden replied: KRAFT FOODS NORTH AMERICA, INC. 761 A. We felt we needed the information because we were making proposals at the negotiations to limit the amount that we paid for health benefits. We felt the information was important to keep us in comparison with the other Kraft fa- cilities in the United States; since the Company had made the statement on a couple of occasions that our benefits were the costliest. We felt that we had an entitlement to that information so that we could see for ourselves if we were, in fact, the most costliest benefits.” (Tr. 46.) When asked why the Union made its 2001 information re- quests Borden replied: A. Given the history of negotiations with Kraft Foods, some of the gains that we made by accepting Corporate Policies that were offered up at lesser cost to our employ- ees and the Company, the comparisons that were made be- tween Woburn and other Kraft facilities within the United States; we felt that the information was relative to our formulating proposals and in going into negotiations with as much information as possible. Q. Now since the Union does not expect the Contract negotiations to begin until April of this year, why did the Union request the information in January and February of 2001? A. Because of the previous negotiations. We requested the information only two or three months prior to the nego- tiations starting, and the resultant charge and the dismissal of that charge, based on the fact that we completed negotia- tions; we felt it would be a good idea to put the Information Requests in much earlier this time so that we could, if there were any legal dealings, we could have those out of the way prior to negotiations starting.” (Tr. 53.) B. Analysis If Respondent refuses to turn over to the Union which repre- sents a unit of its employees information the Union requests that is relevant and necessary to the Union in carrying out its collective-bargaining responsibilities then the Respondent has violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act by not bargaining in good faith. NLRB v. Acme Industrial Co., 385 U.S. 432 (1967), NLRB v. Truitt Mfg. Co., 351 U.S. 149 (1956). Information that pertains to bargaining unit employees repre- sented by the Union, e.g., wages and benefits, is presumptively relevant and necessary to the Union’s bargaining obligation. However, if the information sought pertains to persons outside the bargaining unit then the Union must demonstrate more pre- cisely the necessity and relevance of the information requested. In the instant case all the information the Union seeks per- tains to benefit plans for employees outside the bargaining unit. It is well established that when a Union seeks information concerning matters outside the bargaining unit, the Union is required to make a showing of relevancy and necessity. See, e.g., Public Service Electric & Gas Co., 323 NLRB 1182, 1186 (1997), enfd. 157 F.3d 222 (3d Cir. 1998). But the Board had made it clear that the burden of establish- ing relevancy and necessity in this context “is not an exception- ally heavy one, requiring only that a showing be made of a ‘probability that the desired information is relevant, and that it would be of use to the union in carrying out its statutory duties and responsibilities.’” Id., quoting NLRB v. Acme Industrial Co., supra at 437. Once a specific need has been established, the standard of relevancy “is a ‘liberal discovery-type standard’ requiring only that there exists ‘a probability such data . . . will be of use to the union. . . .”’ Children’s Hospital, 312 NLRB 920, 930 (1993), citing NLRB v. Acme Industrial Co., supra. The General Counsel relies on the recent Board decision in Frito-Lay, Inc., 333 NLRB 1296 (2001). In that case the Board affirmed Judge George Carson and ordered that Frito-Lay turn over to the Union information the union requested reflecting the average wage rate and racial makeup of the workforces at Frito- Lay’s 40 different facilities. In the Frito-Lay case, the informa- tion showing that the Jackson, Mississippi, facility where the union represented a work force that was 90-percent African- American was the lowest paid compared to other facilities where most of the employees were white was dated sometime in 1992 and 5 years later in 1997 it was still considered fresh enough to support the union information request. In the instant case the Union relied on the statements of Donovan and Brady from 1996 and 1997 to support its request for information in 2001. I find that the Union was told that the employees it represented at the Woburn facility were among the highest paid and best benefited of all Respondent’s employees. I conclude that these 1996 and 1997 statements establish the necessity and relevance for the Union to seek access to the benefit plans available to other employees of Respondent at its 79 other facilities. At the trial before me Respondent argues that producing 800 different benefit plans from 80 plants covering 65,000 employ- ees will be overly burdensome. They have a point. I would encourage the parties to agree to something like the following: Respondent lists its 80 plants and the Union can see the requested benefit plans at 15 of the plants that the Union selects from the list of 80 plants. The bottom line is the union in the Frito-Lay case had infor- mation several years old that the employees it represented were among the lowest paid of Frito-Lay employees and they got the wage and racial data it requested from Frito-Lay’s 40 plants. In the instant case the Union had information several years old that the employees it represented were among the highest paid and highest benefited of Respondent’s employees and it should get the information it requested at Respondent’s 80 plants to test those assertions. It is obvious that the Union, when it receives the information requested from Respondent, will be in a better position to know what benefit demands at the negotiating table are reasonable and what benefit demands they might ordinarily want to make at the negotiating table are not reasonable. I find that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act when it failed and refused to turn over the information requested by the Union. One of the cases Respondent relies on is the decision of Judge David L. Evans in Universal Fasteners, Cases 9–CA– 35633 and 9–RD–1839, 1998 NLRB LEXIS 906 (Nov. 17, 1993). No exceptions were taken to Judge Evans’ decision and there is as a result no reported Board decision in the case. DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 762 In Universal Fasteners, the Respondent had two plants. One of the plants was in Lawrenceville, Kentucky, and the Union represented employees at this plant. The other plant was in Centerville, Tennessee, where the employees were not repre- sented by a union. The Respondent in that case was a wholly owned subsidiary of YKK Corporation. YKK Corporation owned another sub- sidiary in Macon, Georgia, named YKK (USA), where the employees were not represented by a union. During the processing of a decertification petition at the Lawrenceville, Kentucky plant the Respondent’s management compared the wages and benefits of nonunion employees at its Centreville, Tennessee, plant and the benefits of nonunion em- ployees at YKK (USA) with the wages and benefits of the un- ion represented employees at the Lawrenceville, Kentucky plant. The Union in that case requested wage and benefit informa- tion for Respondent’s Centreville, Tennessee facility and for the YKK (USA) company in Macon, Georgia. The Respondent turned over the wage and benefit informa- tion from the Centerville, Tennessee plant but not the wage and benefit information at YKK (USA). Judge Evans concluded that Respondent did not violate the Act in failing and refusing to turn over the information regard- ing YKK (USA) company. I believe this case is distinguishable from the case before me because the wage and benefit information data Universal Fas- teners refused to turn over was from a separate wholly-owned subsidiary of Universal Fasteners’ parent company. The wage and benefit information Universal Fasteners did turn over was from one of its plants in Centerville, Tennessee. In the instant case the Union is not asking for benefit information from a separate wholly-owned subsidiary of Phillip Morris but from Respondent’s own plants. The Frito-Lay case is more like the case before me than the Universal Fasteners case. REMEDY Respondent should be ordered to cease and desist from this unlawful conduct, post an appropriate notice and turn over the information requested by the Union. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent, Kraft Foods North America, Inc., is an em- ployer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act. 2. Office and Professional Employees International Union, Local 1295, AFL–CIO, is a labor organization within the mean- ing of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act when it failed and refused to turn over information requested by the Union which was relevant and necessary to the Union in carrying out its collective-bargaining responsibilities. [Recommended Order omitted from publication.] Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation